Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age

Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age is a book written by four-time British Prime Minister William Gladstone in 1858, discussing a range of issues in Homer including an original thesis on colour perception in Ancient Greece.[1] Gladstone was M.P. for the University of Oxford at the time of publication, but had been trained as a classicist.

Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age
AuthorWilliam Ewart Gladstone
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
PublisherOxford University Press
Publication date
1858
Media typePrint
ISBN9780511708091

Colour controversy edit

The section of the book which has received the most mainstream attention is Gladstone's analysis of Homeric language related to colours. Gladstone raises the issue that the colours Homer attributed to many natural objects feel strange to modern readers. For example, Homer applies the adjective porphyreos, which in later Greek roughly means "purple" or "dark red," to describe blood, a dark cloud, a wave, and a rainbow, and he uses the epithet oinops ("wine-looking") to refer to the sea.[2] Gladstone explained this by suggesting that the ancient Greeks categorized colours mainly in terms of light/dark contrasts, rather than in terms of hue.

Many readers, however, have read Gladstone's explanation of Homer's colour terms as a suggestion that he and the other ancient Greeks were colourblind.[2] The most controversial line is his claim that "the organ of colour and its impressions were but partially developed among the Greeks of the heroic age." Gladstone denied that he suggested here the Greeks suffered from colourblindness, though, and he later said: "My meaning was substantially this: that he [Homer] operated, in the main, upon a quantitative scale, with white and black, or light and dark, for its opposite extremities, instead of the qualitative scale opened by the diversities of colour."

Later linguistic research indicates that the Greek language probably did not have a word for the color blue at that time.[3] Color names often developed individually, beginning with black and white, and then red, and only much later adding the color blue, probably when the pigment could be manufactured reliably.[3]

See also edit

Sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gladstone 1858
  2. ^ a b Sampson, Geoffrey (13 May 2013). "Gladstone as linguist" (PDF). Journal of Literary Semantics. 42: 1–29. doi:10.1515/jls-2013-0001. S2CID 170577821. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Why Isn't the Sky Blue?". Radiolab at WNYC Studios. with Guy Deutscher. New York. Retrieved 27 April 2018.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

External links edit