所属专辑:The Iliad(伊利亚特) 猜你喜欢 2498 PPT-Chapter1 by:HarryYU 124 PPT-Chapter2 by:HarryYU 728 《Chapter1》 by:不是思肄 686 Another Chapter-Strap by:嘻哈有态度 140 Chapter IV-Triffaz by:影视原声乐 2240 Claire读Chapter books
THE ILIAD>THE ILIAD最新章节目录 THE ILIADHomer 更新时间:2016-01-18 18:30:43 最新章节:第157章 BOOK XXIV(8) 完结共157章 倒序 第1章 BOOK I(1) 第2章 BOOK I(2) 第3章 BOOK I(3) 第4章 BOOK I(4) 第5章 BOOK I(5) 第6章 BOOK I(6) 第7章 BOOK II(1) 第8章 BOOK II(2) ...
THE ILIAD>THE ILIAD最新章节目录 THE ILIADHomer 更新时间:2016-01-18 18:30:43 最新章节:第157章 BOOK XXIV(8) 完结共157章 倒序 第1章 BOOK I(1) 第2章 BOOK I(2) 第3章 BOOK I(3) 第4章 BOOK I(4) 第5章 BOOK I(5) 第6章 BOOK I(6) 第7章 BOOK II(1) 第8章 BOOK II(2) ...
声音(6)评价(0) 正序|倒序 6 The end 38 2024-09 5 Chapter 13、14、15、16、17 48 2024-09 4 Chapter 8,9,10,11,12 37 2024-09 3 chapter 5,6,7 38 2024-09 2 Chapter 2,3,4 48 2024-08 1 Prologue, chapter 1 Achilles 60 2024-08...
The modern reader approachingThe Iliadwith no understanding of Ancient Greece might find the plot hard to follow. But Homer’s audience would not have found the story confusing.The Iliadwas made to be recited, often with music, and the audience had an intimate understanding of the gods, their...
his final encounter with another human before he enters the Alaskan wilderness. The epic poems theIliadand theOdysseyboth start similarly, employing a technique the ancients called beginningin medias res —"in the middle of things." ThoughInto the Wildis a nonfiction book (that is, a true stor...
Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Introduction Chapter 3 Situating Plato's Dialectical politics in Contemporary Debates Chapter 4 Penelope's Dialectical Weavings... J Tate 被引量: 0发表: 1952年 The Greek Concept of Justice (1978) The Greek Concept of Justice. From its Shadow in Homer to its Substa...
This chapter explores nostalgia, idolatry and homoerotic subtexts in Wolfgang Petersen’sTroy, a commercially successful classical epic based on events depicted in Homer’sThe Iliad. The chapter begins with a discussion of the ancient landscape seen at the start of the film, locating it within a ...
Or in general the Iliad with the printing press and, still more, printing machines? Don't the song, the chant and the Muse cease with the printer's bar, so don't the conditions necessary for epic poetry disappear? But the difficulty is not in understanding that Greek art and epic ...
Chapter 1: The Sexual Flexibility among Greco-Roman MalesHomer's recounting of the bloody Trojan War in the Iliad and Odyssey illustrates the real life "military culture based on permanent warfare in which masculinity was highly valued."[1] Given our current prejudices, it is then shocking to ...