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William Brockliss, Homeric Imagery and the Natural Environment
Preface
Introduction
Part I. Flowers and Erotic Bodies
1. Flowers, Subjectivity, and the Gaze: The Erotic Imagery of Greek Lyric
2. Fantasizing the Narcissus, Gilding the Hyacinth: Flowers, Seduction, and Deception in Homeric Poetry
3. Shifting Surfaces of Art and Nature: Flowers, Deception, and the Ποικίλον
Part II. Cosmic and Civic Order
4. Stable Trees and Sudden Blooms: Images of Continuity and Change in the Cosmos
5. Anchises’ Pastures, Laertes’ Orchards: Images of Civilization and Its Opposite
6. The Modes of Generation of Flowers and Trees: Homeric Poetry and Theophrastus
Part III. Youth and Death
7. Beauty and Transience? Flowers and Death in Greek Elegy and Homeric Poetry
8. Fertility and Formlessness: Images of Death in the Iliad and the Odyssey
9. Homeric Flowers and the Monstrousness of Death
Conclusion
Plates
Appendix. The Semantics of ἄνθος and ἀνθέω
Bibliography
Plates
Plate 1. Spring blooms at the ancient site of Epidaurus, 30 March 2015.
Photo by the author.
Plate 2. Spring blooms at the ancient site of Eleusis, 31 March 2015.
Photo by the author.
Plate 3. Spring bloom on the slopes of the ancient site of
Mycenae, 10 March 2009.
Photo by the author.
Plate 4. Narcissus tazetta ssp. lacticolor found at Thebes, from the
herbarium of the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew.
Photo by the author.
Plate 5. The sanctuary of Apollo and adjacent buildings on Delos, 1 April 2015.
Photo by the author.
Plate 6. The banks of the Scamander north of Ezine, August 30 2008.
Photo by Gebhard Bieg, Troia Project, University of Tübingen.