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The Aesthetics of Dialect in Hellenistic EpigramCoughlan, Taylor 02 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Greek poets in South Africa, 1960-200430 January 2014 (has links)
M.A. (Greek) / The main purpose of this study has been to investigate the work of Greek poets in South Africa's Hellenic Diaspora from 1960 up to date, a period of a more voiummous artistic production due to the noticeable increase in the number of new Hellene immigrants and the innovative cultural atmosphere they brought along. Under this perspective, we examined the forces which led individuals to artistic creation with special focus on the relation between national identity and poetic production. Research has initially been based on poem collections, personal interviews as well as on newspaper articles, magazine publications and schedules of events which constitute our primary resources. In due course, lexicons and encyclopaedias were used to clarify terminology and semantics, as well as p!Cvious studies and relevant bibliography in order to prove, substantiate and enrich our present study. Implementation of quantitative and qualitative approaches with the use of questionnaires, interviews and data analysis rendered our project the following form: In the first chapter, Hellas is examined as the poets' country of origin in order to investigate the possible historic and literary influences carried over by the Greek poets to their new home. A history review of the period between the Second World War and 1974 was conducted examining the Hellenic socio-economic conditions predominant during the said period, which are likely to have led individuals into emigrating, as well as the post-war Hellenic literary development…
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Verweerde skrif: ʼn tematiese ondersoek na ouderdom, verganklikheid, aftakeling en sterflikheid in die vroeë Griekse digkunsErasmus, Alecia 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: With the discovery of the so-called “New Sappho” in 2004, there has been a revival in
the research about Sappho, Greek lyric and old age in Greek literature. In this short
fragment, Sappho writes about the symptoms of old age. She interweaves this with
mythological references to Eos and Tithonus. It was especially this remarkable find
that has focused my attention on the themes of old age, caducity, bodily decay and
mortality in Greek literature. In my opinion the discovery of a new fragment of
Greek poetry justifies research on this genre as well as the themes that occur in it.
This thesis explores the following research question: What is the view of old age that
is brought to the fore in a thematic examination of early Greek poetry? My
discussion includes works by Sappho, Anacreon, Ibycus, Mimnermus, Tyrtaeus of
Sparta, Solon of Athens, Theognis, Archilochus and Semonides of Amorgos.
This thesis found that the view of old age in early Greek poetry is predominantly
negative. The thesis proves the hypothesis that the view of old age, caducity, bodily
decay and mortality that is brought to the fore in a thematic examination of early
Greek poetry agrees with the negative view of these aspects as appears from the
other literary genres from the Greek canon.
In most cases there is a strong relationship between old age and eroticism and how
old age obstructs eroticism. In these fragments we often find a human revolt on a
universal scale against old age and the loss of love. The aged body is no longer seen
as an erotic object. This also has serious implications for the social circumstances of
the aged. The use of the first person voice stresses both the raw, personal experience
of old age and the universal experience thereof. The first person plural in some cases
underlines the collective attitude and experiences of the ageing person.
Early Greek poets describe old age as πόλιος (grey), ὀδυνηρός (painful), ἀργαλέος
(baneful), κακός (evil), ἄμορφος (ugly), οὐλόμενος (accursed) and ἄζηλος
(unenviable). The epithets and adjectival clauses which are identified in the
discussed poetry form a conceptual nexus of old age which is almost uniformly negative. Except for Tyrtaeus and maybe Solon, most poets have a disapproving,
reproachful, despising and repulsive attitude towards old age. In these fragments,
old age is described as the threshold to death. Old age in itself is a type of death, a
living death. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Met die ontdekking van die sogenaamde “Nuwe Sappho” in 2004 het daar weer
opflikkering gekom in die navorsing oor Sappho, die Griekse liriek en die ouderdom
in Griekse letterkunde. In hierdie kort fragment skryf Sappho oor die simptome van
die ouderdom en verweef sy dit ook met mitologiese verwysings na Eos en Tithonos.
Dit is juis hierdie merkwaardige vonds wat my aandag gefokus het op die temas van
ouderdom, verganklikheid, aftakeling en sterflikheid in die Griekse letterkunde. Die
ontdekking van ʼn nuwe fragment Griekse poësie regverdig na myns insiens
navorsing oor hierdie genre en dus ook die temas wat daarin voorkom. In hierdie
tesis word die volgende navorsingsprobleem ondersoek: Wat is die siening van
ouderdom, verganklikheid, aftakeling en sterflikheid wat na vore kom in ʼn tematiese
ondersoek van die vroeë Griekse digkuns? My bespreking sluit werke deur Sappho,
Anakreon, Ibukos, Mimnermos, Turtaios van Sparta, Solon van Athene, Theognis,
Archilochos en Semonides van Amorgos in.
In hierdie tesis is daar bevind dat die siening van die ouderdom in die vroeë Griekse
digkuns oorwegend negatief is. Die tesis bewys die hipotese dat die siening van
ouderdom, verganklikheid, aftakeling en sterflikheid wat na vore kom in ʼn tematiese
ondersoek van die vroeë Griekse digkuns ooreenstem met die negatiewe siening oor
hierdie aspekte wat in ander letterkundige genres van die Griekse kanon blyk.
Daar is in die meeste gevalle ʼn sterk verbintenis tussen die ouderdom en die erotiek
en hoe eersgenoemde die tweede kortwiek. Dikwels tref ons op ʼn universele vlak ʼn
uiting van die menslike verset teen die ouderdom en die verlies van liefde in die
fragmente aan. Die bejaarde liggaam word nie meer as ʼn erotiese voorwerp gesien
nie. Dit het ook ernstige implikasies vir die sosiale omstandighede van die bejaardes.
Die gebruik van die eerstepersoonspreker in die vroeë Griekse digkuns onderstreep
tegelyk die rou, persoonlike belewenis van die ouderdom sowel as die universele
ervaring daarvan. Die eerstepersoonsmeervoud in sekere gevalle beklemtoon die
kollektiewe houding en ervaring van die ouerwordende mens.
Die ouderdom word deur die vroeë Griekse digters as πόλιος (gryskop; grou),
ὀδυνηρός (pynlik), ἀργαλέος (verderflik), κακός (boos), ἄμορφος (lelik), οὐλόμενος
(vervloek) en ἄζηλος (onbenydenswaardig) uitgekryt. Die epiteta en byvoeglike
bepalings wat in die bespreekte kortpoësie aangetref word, vorm ʼn konseptuele
neksus van die ouderdom wat amper gelykmatig negatief is. Behalwe vir die
uitsondering van Turtaios en miskien Solon, is die meeste digters se houding teenoor
die ouderdom en bejaardes daardie van afkeer, verwyt, veragting en ongeneentheid.
In dié fragmente word die ouderdom geskets as die drumpel tot die dood.
Ouderdom is op sigself ʼn soort dood, ʼn lewende dood.
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Truth and Genre in PindarPark, Arum 05 1900 (has links)
By convention epinician poetry claims to be both obligatory and truthful, yet in the intersection of obligation and truth lies a seeming paradox: the poet presents his poetry as commissioned by a patron but also claims to be unbiased enough to convey the truth. In Slater's interpretation Pindar reconciles this paradox by casting his relationship to the patron as one of guest-friendship: when he declares himself a guest-friend of the victor, he agrees to the obligation ‘a) not to be envious of his xenos and b) to speak well of him. The argumentation is: Xenia excludes envy, I am a xenos, therefore I am not envious and consequently praise honestly’. Slater observes that envy may foster bias against the patron, but the problem of pro-patron bias remains: does the poet's friendship with and obligation to his patron produce praise at the expense of truth?
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Evaluative language in Greek lyric and elegiac poetry and inscribed epigram to the end of the fifth century B.C.ERobertson, George Ian Cantlie January 1999 (has links)
This dissertation is a study of the rhetorical uses of evaluative language in Greek lyric and elegiac poetry and inscribed epigram of the period from the seventh to the fifth century B.C.E. The discussion focuses on the poets' evaluations of human worth in three areas, each of which forms a separate chapter: martial valour, the relationship between physical appearance and inner virtue, and political or social values. Within each chapter, particular aspects of the subject under discussion are treated under separate headings. Although the literary material has been treated in various ways in the past, the inclusion of inscribed epigram alongside the other literature in this case offers evidence from a related but distinct branch of poetic tradition for the development and expression of these values; divergences between the literary and the inscriptional tradition can be quite marked, as can the different approaches taken by poets of various genres within the literary material. The attempts of previous scholarship to define clear and consistent systems or codes of value represented in the poetry and to trace their development over this period have been generally unconvincing, but the poets' deployment of evaluative language does show some discernible patterns which appear to be related more to genre and poetic tradition than to the purely chronological processes of development that have been proposed by other scholars.
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Tradução e comentário à 13ª Olímpica de Píndaro / Translations and commentary to Pindar\'s Olympian 13thSilva, Tiago Bentivoglio da 12 November 2015 (has links)
O objetivo deste trabalho é apresentar uma tradução e um comentário textual à 13ª Olímpica de Píndaro, com base nas mais recentes edições e trabalhos críticos acerca do poeta e do gênero desse poema, o epinício. Também foi composto um ensaio interpretativo que tenta abarcar os temas mais importantes da ode e relacioná-los com o todo da obra de Píndaro. As imagens do poema desenvolvem a contraposição entre medida e excesso, representada tanto nas referências mitológicas (Têmis e as Horas contra a Soberba e Insolência; Belerofonte encilhando Pégaso) quanto nas reflexões da primeira pessoa (que não deve exceder-se no elogio para não errar o alvo, assim como um arqueiro disparando suas flechas; nem deve tentar relatar todas as vitórias da família, pois são tão numerosas quanto os grãos de areia etc.). Em anexo, há a tradução dos escólios relativos a essa ode para permitir a consulta direta a essa fonte, que não se acha traduzida. / The objective of this study is to present a translation and a textual commentary of Pindar\'s Olympian 13, based on the most recent editions and critical works about the poet and the genre of this poem, the epinician. An interpretative essay was composed in order to cover the most important themes of this ode and articulate them with Pindar\'s other works. The poetical imagens of the poem develop the central theme, the opposition between measure and excess, represented by the mithological references (Themis and the Hours against the Excess and the Satiety; Bellerophon taming Pegasus etc.) and by the first-person\'s reflections on the laudatory art (the first-person should not exceed in praise in order to not miss the target, as an archer with his arrows; nor should try to enumerate all the victories of this family, for they are greater than the grains of sand from the sea). There is a translation of the scholia to this ode attached, allowing direct consultation, once there is no other version of this text.
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Spectres of metre : English poetry in classical measures, 1860-1930Polten, Orla January 2018 (has links)
Why did so many poets attempt English verse in Ancient Greek and Latin metres during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries? And what was at stake in these attempts? The most immediate importance of these questions to literary criticism is the fact that they mark one of the most striking and consistent points of contiguity between the verse-forms — and poetic theories — of poets commonly categorised as ‘Modernists’ and ‘Victorians’. This study uncovers a lineage of experimentation with classical metres connecting Algernon Charles Swinburne to Ezra Pound and H. D., in the process challenging received periodizations of English verse-history. The assumption that vers libre and metrical verse constitute alternate and incompatible paradigms prevents us from being able to perceive, in either of them, the endless performative possibilities that rhythm offers us — possibilities which, as I intend to demonstrate, underpin some of the period’s most influential experiments in verse-form. My close studies of these poetic forms raise another question: what is the ontological status of these poetic forms that pass through multiple languages and millennia? I frame my readings of English poetry in classical measures through the metaphor of the ghost because English poetry can only encounter classical metres as a kind of spectral or incomplete presence. I refer to this encounter, borrowing a term from Jacques Derrida, as ‘hauntology’: a situation of temporal, historical, and ontological disjunction that occurs when a being or entity, apparently present, is revealed to be an absent or continually-deferred (non-)origin. The hauntological character of English poems in classical measures is due not only to fundamental differences between the syntaxes and phonologies of Ancient Greek, Latin, and English, but also to the loss of knowledge concerning the traditions and conventions of metrical performance in Ancient Greek and Latin. This is why writing English poetry in classical metres generally poses a far greater challenge — both technically and conceptually — than writing English poetry in the metres of a living language: recreating classical metres in English requires reimagining the very nature of the encounter between poems and bodies, while also facing up to the quasi-magical charge that ‘the classical’ holds in the English literary imagination.
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The sources and inspiration of Cretan poetry under the VenetiansMorgan, Gareth January 1957 (has links)
No description available.
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Le Corpus Theocriteum et Homère un problème d'authenticité, Idylle 25 /Kurz, André. January 1900 (has links)
Thèse : Lettres : Neuchâtel : 1980. / Bibliogr. p. 185-194. Index.
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Women's songs and their cultic background in archaic GreeceKlinck, Anne L. (Anne Lingard) January 1994 (has links)
This thesis applies to Archaic Greek literature the medievalist's concept of "women's songs," that is, love-poems given to a female persona and composed in a popular register. In the Greek context a distinct type can be recognised in poems of women's affections (not necessarily love-poems as such) composed in an ingenuous register and created for performance, choral or solo, within a women's thiasos. The poems studied are those of Sappho, along with the few surviving partheneia of Alcman and Pindar. The feminine is constructed, rather mechanically by Pindar, more subtly by the other two, from a combination of tender feeling, personal and natural beauty, and an artful artlessness. / It is not possible to reconstruct a paradigmatic thiasos which lies behind the women's songs, but certain characteristic features merge, especially the pervasiveness of homoerotic attachments and the combination of a personal, affective, with a social, religious function. In general, women's groups in ancient Greece must have served as a counterbalance to the prevailing male order. However, while some of the women's thiasoi provide a vehicle for the release of female aggression, the function of the present group is essentially harmonious and integrative.
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