Spelling suggestions: "subject:"epi poetry""
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Schweigen, Verschweigen, Übergehen; die Darstellung des Unausgesprochenen in der Odyssee.Besslich, Siegfried. January 1966 (has links)
Revision of thesis, Mainz. / Bibliography: p. [153]-154.
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Secular heroic epic poetry of the Caroline periodHiggins, Alison Isabel Twistington, January 1953 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Bern. / Published also as Schweizer anglistische Arbeiten, Swiss studies in English, Bd. 31. Vita. Bibliography: p. 131-133.
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Theory and practice of English narrative verse since 1833 an enquiry ...Doorn, Willem van, January 1900 (has links)
Proefschrift--Amsterdam. / "Stellingen": [4] p. laid in. Bibliography: p. 244-246.
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Aspects of the speech in the later Roman epicLipscomb, Herbert Cannon, January 1980 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Johns Hopkins University, 1907. / Reprint. Originally published: Baltimore : J.H. Furst, 1909. Includes bibliographical references.
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Folknamnet Geatas i den fornengelska dikten Beowulf ...Schück, Henrik, January 1907 (has links)
Inbjudningsskrift--Upsala. / Issued also in Upsala universitets årsskrift, 1907.
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Spiegelungen der Kriemhildfigur in der Rezeption des Nibelungenliedes Figurenentwürfe und Gender-Diskurse in der Klage, der Kudrun und den Rosengärten mit einem Ausblick auf ausgewählte Rezeptionsbeispiele des 18., 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts /Nolte, Ann-Katrin. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Bamberg, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 228-242).
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Philodemus, De bono rege secundum Homerum a critical text with commentary (cols. 21-39) /Fish, Jeffrey Brian, Philodemus, January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 1999. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 205-210).
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Boundary violations a reflection of pessimism in Lucan's Bellum civile /Davis, Erin Paige. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2007. / The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on October 25, 2007 Includes bibliographical references.
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Telamonian Ajax : a study of his reception in Archaic and Classical GreeceBocksberger, Sophie Marianne January 2016 (has links)
This thesis is a systematic study of the representations of Telamonian Ajax in archaic and classical Greece. Its aim is to trace, examine, and understand how and why the constitutive elements of his myth evolved in the way they did in the long chain of its receptions. Particular attention is paid to the historical, socio-cultural and performative contexts of the literary works and visual representations I analyse as well as to the audience for which these were produced. The study is divided into three parts, each of which reflects a different reality in which Ajax has been received (different with respect to time, place, or literary genre). Artistic representations of the hero, as well as his religious dimension and political valence, are consistently taken into account throughout the thesis. The first part - Ajax from Salamis - focuses on epic poetry, and thus investigates the Panhellenic significance of the hero (rather than his reception in a particular place). It treats the entire corpus of early Greek hexameter poetry that has come down to us in written form as the reception of a common oral tradition which each poem has adapted for its own purpose. I establish that in the larger tradition of the Trojan War, Ajax was a hero characterised by his gift of invulnerability. Because of this power, he is the figure who protects his companions - dead or alive - par excellence. However, this ability probably also led him to become over-confident, and, accordingly, to reject Athena's support on the battlefield. Hence, the goddess's hostility towards him, which she demonstrated by making him lose the reward of apioteia (Achilles' arms). His defeat made Ajax so angry that he became mad and committed suicide. I also show how this traditional Ajax has been adapted to fit into the Iliad's own aesthetics. The second part - Ajax in Aegina - concentrates on the reception of Ajax in the victory odes of Pindar and Bacchylides for Aeginetan patrons. I argue that in the first part of the fifth century, Ajax becomes a figure imbued with a strong political dimension (especially with regard to the relationship between Athens and Aegina). Accordingly, I show how the presence of Ajax in Pindar's and Bacchylides' poems is often politically charged, and significant within the historical context. I discuss the influence this had on his representation. Finally, the third part moves to Athens, as I consider Ajax's reception during three distinct periods: the sixth century, the first half of the fifth century, and finally the rest of the classical period. I equally insist on the political dimension of the figure. I demonstrate that his figure undergoes a shift of paradigm in the early fifth century, which deeply affects his representation. By following in the footsteps of Ajax, this study prompts a series of reflections and comments on each of the works in which the hero features as well as on the relationship of these works to the historical context in which they were produced.
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'I sing'? : narrative technique in epic poetryHaydon, Liam David January 2012 (has links)
This thesis examines the genre of epic, and particularly Milton’s Paradise Lost. It argues that it is only in attending to the contextual interactions within Paradise Lost that its full meaning can be comprehended. It demonstrates that the poem not only narrates the Fall, but actively performs its consequences in its thematic and linguistic structures, which continually stress the impossibility of approaching perfect (divine) totality. Chapter one outlines the theoretical response to epic, read as a petrified genre in contrast to the newness, openness and linguistic flexibility of the novel. It then challenges these assumptions through a reading of the invocation to book III of Paradise Lost. The chapter closes by examining seventeenth-century writings on epic, demonstrating that Milton’s contemporaries saw the epic as defined by the possibility of didactic intervention into its context. Chapter two examines the forms of the epic metaphor, which serve as a temporal link between the ‘mythic’ past of epic and contemporary events. It then shows that the nationalistic impulse of epic was a method by which the mythic past of a country was deployed as an exemplary narrative for the present. The chapter closes by considering the ways in which shifts in national conception were mapped onto the epic. Chapter three outlines Paradise Lost’s thematic engagement with the concept of representation. It focuses on the twin images of the music of the spheres and the Tower of Babel, used in Paradise Lost to represent man’s relationship with God. It argues that the poem uses these tropes to explore the linguistic effects of the Fall. Both these images are deployed to suggest that postlapsarian expression is too open and ambiguous to properly portray divinity. Chapter four moves that discussion to a linguistic level, arguing that the poem is characterised by indeterminacy. It argues that Paradise Lost calls into question the possibility of expressing perfect truth in fractured, postlapsarian language. It shows that punning is the mark of fallen creatures in the poem, and suggests that the poem’s own puns exploit this category to linguistically question its own status as representation through performances of ambiguity. The conclusion synthesises these local readings of Paradise Lost into a reading of the poem as a whole. It argues that these individual instances demonstrate the poem’s continual reflexive concern over its theodicean project. By continually expressing ambiguity, at the level of imagery and language, Paradise Lost draws attention to its status as postlapsarian art, and the consequent impossibility of approaching the divine perfection exemplified by the celestial music or prelapsarian language.
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