Bartley, Christina Marie2021-03-242021-03-242021-03-24http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41921http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-26143This thesis seeks to analyze the Homeric allusions in the Aethiopica with an inclusive definition to explore Heliodorus’ authorial motives. To approach this project, I use textual analysis to avoid arguments rooted in assumptions of the historical context of the novel, about which we know almost nothing. I explore how links to Homer’s Odyssey are visible within the structural organization of the text and the content of the text. I also explore how the content of the novel reproduces actions and compatible settings of Odyssean characters, which therefore qualifies Heliodorus’ characters in a metaliterary commentary with Homer’s archaic epic poem. The division of Odyssean actions and traits depicted in Heliodorus’ characters introduce a new addition to the heroic legacy established by Homer and distances the hero from Greek identity. I conclude that Heliodorus’ adherences to epic conventions and departures thereof inform the subtextual commentaries conveyed in the Aethiopica.enAethiopicaHeliodorusAncient Greek NovelAllusionsIntertextualityHomerMetaliterary commentaryCalasirisOdysseusOdysseyIliadEpisodesCalasiris the Pseudo-Greek Hero: Odyssean Allusions in Heliodorus' AethiopicaThesis