ABSTRACT

The epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey, attributed to Homer, are among the oldest surviving works of literature derived from oral performance. Deeply embedded in these works is the notion that they were intended to be heard: there is something musical about Homer's use of language and a vivid quality to his images that transcends the written page to create a theatrical experience for the listener. Indeed, it is precisely the theatrical quality of the poems that would inspire later interpreters to cast the Odyssey and the Iliad in a host of other media-novels, plays, poems, paintings, and even that most elaborate of all art forms, opera, exemplified by no less a work than Monteverdi's Il ritorno di Ulisse in patria. In Performing Homer: The Voyage of Ulysses from Epic to Opera, scholars in classics, drama, Italian literature, art history, and musicology explore the journey of Homer's Odyssey from ancient to modern times. The book traces the reception of the Odyssey though the Italian humanist sources—from Dante, Petrarch, and Ariosto—to the treatment of the tale not only by Monteverdi but also such composers as Elizabeth Jacquet de la Guerre, Gluck, and Alessandro Scarlatti, and the dramatic and poetic traditions thereafter by such modern writers as Derek Walcott and Margaret Atwood.

part 1|1 pages

Epic theatricalities

chapter 1|14 pages

Soundings of the lyre

Performing Homer in archaic Greece

chapter 2|17 pages

“Like an expert singer skilled at lyre and song”

Reading the Odyssey as opera

chapter 3|12 pages

Ariosto’s Ulysses

Medieval Homer and the querelle des femmes

part 2|1 pages

Staging a baroque Homer

chapter 4|13 pages

La castità rinforzata

From Homer to Monteverdi

chapter 5|13 pages

Drama, not epic

Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria and the aesthetic discourse in subsequent librettos 1

chapter 6|10 pages

Singing love and dancing war

The ballo in Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria 1

chapter 7|10 pages

Reimagining Ulysses

Spectacular stage effects in contemporary productions of Monteverdi’s Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria

part 3|1 pages

Traditions and afterlife

chapter 10|20 pages

Intertextual travel

Cantata as a mode of Homeric reception in early eighteenth-century France 1

chapter 11|12 pages

Late Victorian musical odysseys, scholarship, and translation

The curious case of Samuel Butler

part |1 pages

Epilogue