TY - JOUR
T1 - The Poetics of Distress, the Rape of the Heavenly Maiden, and the Most Ancient Sleeping Beauty: Oralistic, Linguistic, and Comparative Perspectives on the (Pre-)Historical Development of the Homeric Hymn to Demeter
AU - Ginevra, Riccardo
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Often compared with West Asian and Egyptian texts, the Homeric Hymn to Demeter (hereafter Hymn) and the other variants of the myth of Demeter and Persephone-Kore have a number of onomastic, phraseological, and thematic parallels in texts composed in other Indo-European languages. By means of an oralistic, linguistic, and comparative approach, my research aims to, firstly, reconstruct the common background of the Hymn and its Indo-European counterparts on the strength of a systematical study of their correspondences and, secondly, analyse the interplay between Indo-European poetic-mythological heritage and other components of different origin (e.g., motifs of West Asian infuence or international folktale patterns) within the compositional devices of Greek oral-traditional poetry. CONTENTS: §1. Introduction: the “Withdrawal and Return” theme and the West Asian component of the Hymn §2. Findings: the Hymn’s Indo-European background §2.1 The Indo-European “Poetics of Distress” §2.2. The Indo-European myth of the “Rape of the Maiden who is the Daughter of the Sky” §2.3 The most ancient “Sleeping Beauty” §3. Impact of the research §3.1 The (pre-)historical development of the Hymn §3.2 The Hymn’s “monumental composition” and its relevance to the Humanities
AB - Often compared with West Asian and Egyptian texts, the Homeric Hymn to Demeter (hereafter Hymn) and the other variants of the myth of Demeter and Persephone-Kore have a number of onomastic, phraseological, and thematic parallels in texts composed in other Indo-European languages. By means of an oralistic, linguistic, and comparative approach, my research aims to, firstly, reconstruct the common background of the Hymn and its Indo-European counterparts on the strength of a systematical study of their correspondences and, secondly, analyse the interplay between Indo-European poetic-mythological heritage and other components of different origin (e.g., motifs of West Asian infuence or international folktale patterns) within the compositional devices of Greek oral-traditional poetry. CONTENTS: §1. Introduction: the “Withdrawal and Return” theme and the West Asian component of the Hymn §2. Findings: the Hymn’s Indo-European background §2.1 The Indo-European “Poetics of Distress” §2.2. The Indo-European myth of the “Rape of the Maiden who is the Daughter of the Sky” §2.3 The most ancient “Sleeping Beauty” §3. Impact of the research §3.1 The (pre-)historical development of the Hymn §3.2 The Hymn’s “monumental composition” and its relevance to the Humanities
KW - Homeric Hymn to Demeter, Oral Tradition, Comparative Poetics, Comparative Mythology, Indo-European
KW - Homeric Hymn to Demeter, Oral Tradition, Comparative Poetics, Comparative Mythology, Indo-European
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/233713
M3 - Article
SN - 2329-0137
SP - N/A-N/A
JO - CENTER FOR HELLENIC STUDIES RESEARCH BULLETIN
JF - CENTER FOR HELLENIC STUDIES RESEARCH BULLETIN
ER -