Published April 30, 2026 | Version v1

The Field of Access: Perceptual Misalignment and Mediated Presence in Archaic Greek Poetics

Authors/Creators

Description

This essay develops a theoretical framework for reading Homeric epic, archaic lyric, and inscribed/epigrammatic poetry through the concept of perceptual misalignment. It argues that presence in archaic Greek poetics is not simply immediate or self-evident, but becomes available through a field of access: a structured network of voices, bodies, gestures, objects, places, divine forces, inscriptions, and memories.

Perceptual misalignment occurs when an index of presence — such as an “I,” a “here,” a voice, a body, or a speaking object — remains active without fully coinciding with its source, support, occasion, or scene of reception.

The essay traces this dynamic across three domains: Homeric epic distributes perception across gods, bodies, public speech, and heroic action; lyric poetry, especially Sappho 31, concentrates this distributed field within the vulnerable body of the speaking “I”; inscription and epigram relocate presence onto objects, places, and durable supports, as in Nestor’s Cup and the Midas epigram.

Its central claim is that archaic Greek poetics does not treat perception as possession, but as mediated access to presence.

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The Field of Access Perceptual Misalignment and Mediated Presence in Archaic Greek Poetics.pdf