Parry in Paris: Structuralism, Historical Linguistics, and the Oral Theory

Classical Antiquity 24 (2):257-284 (2005)
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Abstract

This paper investigates the origins of the Oral Theory as formulated by Milman Parry in Paris during the late 1920s by reexamining the scholarship on which it rests. Parry's Oral Theory compared the texts of oral performances in Yugoslavia with the Homeric texts in order to shed light on the presumed oral origins of the latter. His work integrated the work of the linguist and Indo-Europeanist Antoine Meillet, the linguist and scholar of oral poetics Matthias Murko, and the anthropologists Lucien Lévy-Bruhl and Marcel Jousse

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References found in this work

Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word.Walter J. Ong - 1983 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 16 (4):270-271.
Tristes Tropiques.Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1958 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 13 (4):554-554.
Preface to Plato.Friedrich Solmsen & Eric A. Havelock - 1966 - American Journal of Philology 87 (1):99.
The Presence of the Word.Walter J. Ong - 1967 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 1 (2):124-125.

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