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Article Excerpt After 2700 years on the best seller list, Homer's Iliad and Odyssey in English translation are still required reading in most college/university basic world literature courses, judging from their inclusion in most introductory world literature texts (The Norton Anthology, The Longman Anthology, The Bedford Anthology). Interest in Homer in the 21st century seems to be stronger than ever. The most recent of the over two dozen translations of Homer's Iliad and/or Odyssey in the last 50 years has just been published (The Iliad, trans. Herbert Jordan, University of Oklahoma Press). Since 1990 there have been eight new English translations of the Odyssey and six of the Iliad (see Bibliography, Il. English Translations of the Iliad and the Odyssey). New critical studies on Homer since 2000 seem to be on the rise (see Bibliography, I. A Selected List of Critical Works on Homer's Epics Since 2000). A renewed interest by historians and critics questioning the authenticity of the Trojan War and Troy has generated a number of new books (Bryce, 2006, Burgess 2001, Castledon 2006, Latacz 2001, Lowenstam 2008, Strauss 2006, thomas and Conant 2005, and Thompson 2004), which have appeared in the last few years (see Bibliography, I. A Selected List of Critical Works on Homer's Epics Since 2000). Even the graphic novel has appropriated Homer in the projected seven volume series of Eric Shanower, of which three volumes (27 installments; see Works Cited) have already been published.
In her recent book, The Return of Ulysses; A Cultural History of Homer's Odyssey (2008), Edith Hall revisits the influences of Homer's epic on Western culture first approached by W. B. Stanford in his classic The Ulysses Theme (1954) and finds that Homer's influence has pervaded all phases of contemporary culture. This is especially evident in film. Of the several versions of Homer's epics brought to the screen since the silent era (see Hanna R. Roisman's essay in this collection), almost half have been produced in the late 20th and early 21st centuries (Troy, 2004, Helen of Troy (TV mini series), 2003, The Odyssey (TV mini series), 1997, Helen of Troy, 1955, Ulysses 1954). In addition to the film adaptations of the Iliad and Odyssey mentioned above, critics have also turned to both classic and contemporary world cinema for Homeric influences, especially in the American Western film (see for example Blundell and Ormand [1997], Eckstein and Lehman [2004], Myrsiades [2007], and Winkler [1985, 1996]). Works of fiction and non fiction influenced by both of Homer's epics have also been at a record high (see Bibliography, IlI. A Selected List of Works of Fiction Since 2000 Influenced by Homer's Epics).
In order to focus on this resurgence of Homeric interest in popular culture, College Literature several years ago invited a number of scholars to contribute articles for possible inclusion in...
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