A Companion to the Classical TraditionCraig W. Kallendorf John Wiley & Sons, 2008 M04 15 - 512 páginas A Companion to the Classical Tradition accommodates the pressing need for an up-to-date introduction and overview of the growing field of reception studies.
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Página 6
... human experience which is once for all finished and unchangeable. All rules are definite, and all exceptions established in the known literature. The result is that the mind acquires both a precision and flexibility which the study of ...
... human experience which is once for all finished and unchangeable. All rules are definite, and all exceptions established in the known literature. The result is that the mind acquires both a precision and flexibility which the study of ...
Página 7
... human life. It needs to possess permanent and universal value so as to be proof against the corroding effects of change (the emergence of new social and cultural formations) and relativity (e.g., the challenge of other sources of ...
... human life. It needs to possess permanent and universal value so as to be proof against the corroding effects of change (the emergence of new social and cultural formations) and relativity (e.g., the challenge of other sources of ...
Página 13
... human experience (larking, sighing) that the pupil may one day be able to understand. Here Rumens had in mind the ... humanity answer me'' (Stray 1998: 72). We have already seen a variety of permutations of teaching and learning, a ...
... human experience (larking, sighing) that the pupil may one day be able to understand. Here Rumens had in mind the ... humanity answer me'' (Stray 1998: 72). We have already seen a variety of permutations of teaching and learning, a ...
Página 31
... human kindness, answer me.... I absorb myself into them completely'' (Atkinson and Sices 1996: 262–5). Macchiavelli makes two assumptions that are important here. First, the texts of the classical authors offered unimpeded access to ...
... human kindness, answer me.... I absorb myself into them completely'' (Atkinson and Sices 1996: 262–5). Macchiavelli makes two assumptions that are important here. First, the texts of the classical authors offered unimpeded access to ...
Página 34
... human identity could be manipulated in a way that tends to efface the difference between life and art (Greenblatt 1980: 1–4). The ascent of Mt. Ventoux that generated one of Petrarch's most famous letters, modern scholarship tells us ...
... human identity could be manipulated in a way that tends to efface the difference between life and art (Greenblatt 1980: 1–4). The ascent of Mt. Ventoux that generated one of Petrarch's most famous letters, modern scholarship tells us ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Aeneid aesthetic African American ancient Antigone architecture Aristotle Aristotle’s artists Baroque became central-eastern Europe Christian Cicero classical antiquity classical authors classical texts classical tradition contemporary critics culture developed drama early Eclogue eighteenth century empire English epic essay Euripides European example figures French Freud genre German Greece Heaney Homer Horace human humanist Iliad imitation important influence inspired interpretation Italian Italian Fascism Italy Jesuit language later Latin learning literary literature Medea medieval Middle Ages modern moral myth mythology neoclassicism nineteenth century novel Oedipus Ovid Ovid’s Oxford pagan painting period Petrarch philosophical Plato play poem poet poetic poetry political postcolonial prose published reception reception theory Renaissance revival role Rome scholars scholarship schools seventeenth century sixteenth century Sophocles Spain Spanish Standard Edition Stoic story style T. S. Eliot theater themes theory tragedy translation twentieth century University Vela´zquez Vergil vernacular verse writing wrote