pplpod

Homer: Why the Author of the Iliad and Odyssey Was Probably Never One Person

June 15, 2026·23 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

Homer is the most famous author in Western civilization, and he probably never existed — at least not as a single person who sat down and composed the Iliad and the Odyssey. The "Homeric Question" — whether these epics were written by one poet, compiled from oral traditions by many, or assembled by later editors — has consumed scholars for over two centuries and remains one of the most fascinating unsolved problems in literary history.This episode examines the evidence for and against a historical Homer, the oral tradition theory that explains how epics can exist without a single author, and what the debate reveals about how stories become literature.The ancient traditions about Homer — the blind bard, the seven cities that claimed him, the biographical legendsThe "Homeric Question" — Wolf, Parry, Lord, and the scholarly debate over single versus multiple authorshipMilman Parry's oral-formulaic theory and the Yugoslav singers who proved epics could be composed liveWhy the question matters beyond scholarship — what Homer's authorship tells us about how cultures create literature

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