Greek Poetry, from Homer to Seferis
Author: Constantine Athanasius Trypanis
Publisher: Chicago : University of Chicago Press
Published: 1981
Total Pages: 896
ISBN-13: 9780226813165
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Author: Constantine Athanasius Trypanis
Publisher: Chicago : University of Chicago Press
Published: 1981
Total Pages: 896
ISBN-13: 9780226813165
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Peter Mackridge
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2023-03-31
Total Pages: 169
ISBN-13: 1000892719
DOWNLOAD EBOOKOriginally published in 1996, this volume contains essays by scholars, critics and translators and includes themes such as the myth in the Cretan Renaissance and the use of ancient myth by 19th and 20th Century poets. Some essays deal with individual mythical figures such as Odysseus, Orpheus, Prometheus and Aphrodite, while others deal with the problematic issue of the use of myth by Greek women poets. The discussion is completed by comparing attitudes to the ancient Greeks as embodied in English and modern Greek poetry.
Author: Peter Constantine
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Published: 2010
Total Pages: 692
ISBN-13: 9780393060836
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn extensive volume of Greek poetry includes more than one thousand entries spanning three millenia and many diverse traditions, in an anthology that includes works by such classic and modern writers as Sappho, Pindar, and Seferis.
Author: George Seferis
Publisher:
Published: 2016
Total Pages: 212
ISBN-13: 9786185048433
DOWNLOAD EBOOKOften compared during his lifetime to T.S. Eliot, whose work he translated and introduced to Greece, George Seferis is noted for his spare, laconic, dense and allusive verse in the Modernist idiom of the first half of the twentieth century. At once intensely Greek and a cosmopolitan of his time (he was a career-diplomat as well as a poet), Seferis better than any other writer expresses the dilemma experienced by his countrymen then and now: how to be at once Greek and modern. The translations that make up this volume are the fruit of more than forty years, and many are published here for the first time.
Author: Kimon Friar
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Published: 1973
Total Pages: 774
ISBN-13:
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Author: David Ricks
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1989-11-30
Total Pages: 210
ISBN-13: 9780521366632
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn exploring the significance of Homer for the poetry of modern Greece - benign shade or looming shadow? - Dr Ricks is tackling a theme that has implications for the study of poetic influence in general. In this 1989 book, he takes the work of Sikelianos, Cavafy and Seferis and subjects a selection of poems to a careful scrutiny. These poems are not imitations of Homer but fresh engagements with Homeric themes, and comparison of the modern versions with the original is found to be illuminating for the poets' methods of composition. Dr Ricks does not lose sight of the larger significance of his subject, and modern poets from outside Greece - Eliot and Pound, in particular - find their way into the discussion. All Greek is translated and the reader has no need to be a specialist in modern or in ancient Greek to find this study absorbing and instructive.
Author: Adam Nicolson
Publisher: Henry Holt and Company
Published: 2014-11-18
Total Pages: 318
ISBN-13: 1627791809
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Adam Nicolson writes popular books as popular books used to be, a breeze rather than a scholarly sweat, but humanely erudite, elegantly written, passionately felt...and his excitement is contagious."—James Wood, The New Yorker Adam Nicolson sees the Iliad and the Odyssey as the foundation myths of Greek—and our—consciousness, collapsing the passage of 4,000 years and making the distant past of the Mediterranean world as immediate to us as the events of our own time. Why Homer Matters is a magical journey of discovery across wide stretches of the past, sewn together by the poems themselves and their metaphors of life and trouble. Homer's poems occupy, as Adam Nicolson writes "a third space" in the way we relate to the past: not as memory, which lasts no more than three generations, nor as the objective accounts of history, but as epic, invented after memory but before history, poetry which aims "to bind the wounds that time inflicts." The Homeric poems are among the oldest stories we have, drawing on deep roots in the Eurasian steppes beyond the Black Sea, but emerging at a time around 2000 B.C. when the people who would become the Greeks came south and both clashed and fused with the more sophisticated inhabitants of the Eastern Mediterranean. The poems, which ask the eternal questions about the individual and the community, honor and service, love and war, tell us how we became who we are.
Author: George Seferis
Publisher:
Published: 1948
Total Pages: 92
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: George Kalogeris
Publisher: LSU Press
Published: 2021-10-13
Total Pages: 119
ISBN-13: 0807175994
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWinthropos, the title of George Kalogeris’s new poetry collection, comes from the “Greek-ified” name his father, an immigrant from Greece, gave to the blue-collar New England town where the family lived. Following in the spirit of his acclaimed Guide to Greece, Kalogeris conjures Winthrop, Massachusetts, as a central locus of lyric and elegiac memory. While the poems in Winthropos reach back into the Hellenic past for imagery and inspiration, they often reside in the American present of their conception, forging childhood memory and local custom into a work of meditative power and evocative beauty.
Author: George Seferis
Publisher:
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 490
ISBN-13: 9780224616508
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