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Belted Heroes and Bound Women Michael J. Bennett

Belted Heroes and Bound Women By Michael J. Bennett

Belted Heroes and Bound Women by Michael J. Bennett


$64.09
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Summary

This work introduces a previously unrecognised Homeric theme of the belted hero and argues for its lasting historical, literary and archaeological significance. The hero fused king, warrior and athlete, and the belts served as visual emblems of power and for women as superior in love.

Belted Heroes and Bound Women Summary

Belted Heroes and Bound Women: The Myth of the Homeric Warrior King by Michael J. Bennett

This clearly written, beautifully illustrated book introduces a previously unrecognized Homeric theme, the 'belted hero,' and argues for its lasting historical, literary, and archaeological significance. The belted hero fuses king, warrior, charioteer, and athlete into a supreme image of political power. The special 'heroic warrior's belts' (zosteres) worn by Agamemnon, Menelaos, and Nestor served as unimpeachable visual emblems of their exalted positions of rank. The feminine counterpart, or zone, presents the woman as superior in the competitive arena of love. Bennett shows that the belted hero represented an ideology attractive to wealthy landowners, their oikoi, and inter-family connections. He suggests that the communal spirit of the hoplite phalanx attempted to appropriate the belted hero ideal, even while undermining its ethos of personal honor. Bennett also makes several important iconographic interpretations that provide fundamentally new insights into early Greek oral epic compositional techniques, conceptions of time, and cosmological structure. Belted Heroes and Bound Women will be of interest to scholars and students of early Greek art, history, or literature.

Belted Heroes and Bound Women Reviews

. . . a boldly original work, employing meticulous archaeology and philology as it explores warrior-belts and their representation in Homeric poetry . . . an exciting vision of the interplay between text and object in early Greece. -- Richard P. Martin, Stanford University
Not since Alice mistook Humpty Dumpty's cravat for a belt has there been a discussion of waistbands as imaginative as this. It goes on to construct a set of extraordinary theories about the meaning of their decoration and the symbolism of belt-wearing in early Greece. * The Classical Review *
. . . tightly written and lucidly presented . . . -- Joanne Milani, The Tampa Tribune

About Michael J. Bennett

Michael J. Bennett is Senior Curator of Classical Art at the Tampa Museum of Art and Associate Professor of Art History at Eckerd College.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Foreword Part 2 Early Greek Belts and Homer Chapter 3 The Harvard Belt Chapter 4 The Harvard Bow Fibula and the Shape of Epic Time Chapter 5 Phrygian-Ionian Belts and Belt Dedications at Olympia Part 6 Belted Heroes and Bound Women in Homeric Epic Chapter 7 References to Belts in the Iliad and the Odyssey Chapter 8 Zoster: King as Hero Chapter 9 Zoma: Athlete as Warrior Chapter 10 Mitre: From Hero to Hoplite Chapter 11 Zone: Bounding the Feminine Chapter 12 Belted Herakles and Belted Aphrodite Chapter 13 Conclusion Chapter 14 Postscript: The Iconography of the Belted Hero Chapter 15 Bibliography Chapter 16 Index

Additional information

NLS9780822630616
9780822630616
0822630613
Belted Heroes and Bound Women: The Myth of the Homeric Warrior King by Michael J. Bennett
New
Paperback
Rowman & Littlefield
1997-05-08
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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