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With concern to Greek literature and particularly to 5th c. BCE
tragic production, papyri provide us usually with not only the most
ancient attestation but also the most reliable one. Much more so
when the papyri are the only or the main witnesses of the tragic
plays. The misfortune is that the papyri transmit texts incomplete,
fragmentary, and almost always anonymous. It is the scholar's task
to read, supplement, interpret and identify the particular texts.
In this book, five Greek plays that survived fragmentarily in
papyri are published, four by Aeschylus and one by Sophocles. Three
of them are satyr plays: Aeschylus' Theoroi, Hypsipyle, and
Prometheus Pyrkaeus; Sophocles' Inachos belongs to the genre we use
to call 'prosatyric'; Aeschylus' Laios is a typical tragedy. The
author's scope was, after each text's identification was secured as
regards the poet and the play's title, to proceed to textual and
interpretative observations that contributed to reconstructing in
whole or in part the storyline of the relevant plays. These
observations often led to unexpected conclusions and an overthrow
of established opinions. Thus, the book will appeal to classical
scholars, especially those interested in theatrical studies.
The poetry of the archaic poets of Lesbos, Sappho and Alcaeus, has
been imperfectly and poorly transmitted either in book fragments or
in later ragged papyri, so that new attempts of interpretation will
always be required, especially when new research tools and methods
have appeared in classical scholarship. The book consists of 14
articles by the author, which present and deal with diverse
problems of the two poets of Lesbos. Various questions on already
transmitted poems, different readings, reconstructions, and
interpretations of the new finds are proposed, but, most
importantly, new approaches in general topics, such as the division
of Sappho's work in Books, the logic leading to this division, the
order of these Books, the contents of each of them, the
interpretation of the surviving fragments, often quite different
than before. A feature that characterizes the old-age poetry of
Sappho is her anxiety about the posthumous fate of her poetry and
her hope that Kleis, her only daughter, will ensure its
dissemination. Finally, the author investigates the communal
festival of Hera in Lesbos, a festival performed in common with
Zeus and Dionysus, the so-called "Lesbian Triad". The festival is
specified as a welcome to the season of spring at the time of the
vernal equinox. Also, the location of the temenos of Hera is
investigated, close to Pyrrha of Lesbos, which was the site of
Alcaeus' second exile.
Ever since the papyrus containing Alcman's Partheneion was first
published in 1863, classicists have been faced with one of the
hardest riddles of their scholarship. Although the language was
more or less clear, the meaning of many verses and the character of
the poem remained elusive. Therefore it is not surprising that
during the century and a half that has elapsed since then, a large
bibliography has piled up, disproportionate to the mere 101
surviving verses of the enigmatic poem. This book presents a
verse-by-verse commentary to the text with a number of new textual
and interpretative proposals based on a detailed inspection of the
papyrus. Numerous new readings are made in particular to the
Scholia to the Partheneion, greatly elucidating not only questions
of interpretation but also problems concerning the composition of
the chorus, the number of its members, the identity of the
protagonist girls, the social context, as well as questions of
performance. The girlish story that lurks in the background but
actually forms the framework of the poem now becomes more clear,
revealing at the same time the didactic objective of the poet. A
new edition of the Partheneion and the Scholia is offered at the
end, together with a new translation of the poem.
The poetry of the archaic poets of Lesbos, Sappho and Alcaeus, has
been imperfectly and poorly transmitted either in book fragments or
in later ragged papyri, so that new attempts of interpretation will
always be required, especially when new research tools and methods
have appeared in classical scholarship. The book consists of 14
articles by the author, which present and deal with diverse
problems of the two poets of Lesbos. Various questions on already
transmitted poems, different readings, reconstructions, and
interpretations of the new finds are proposed, but, most
importantly, new approaches in general topics, such as the division
of Sappho's work in Books, the logic leading to this division, the
order of these Books, the contents of each of them, the
interpretation of the surviving fragments, often quite different
than before. A feature that characterizes the old-age poetry of
Sappho is her anxiety about the posthumous fate of her poetry and
her hope that Kleis, her only daughter, will ensure its
dissemination. Finally, the author investigates the communal
festival of Hera in Lesbos, a festival performed in common with
Zeus and Dionysus, the so-called "Lesbian Triad". The festival is
specified as a welcome to the season of spring at the time of the
vernal equinox. Also, the location of the temenos of Hera is
investigated, close to Pyrrha of Lesbos, which was the site of
Alcaeus' second exile.
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Lemmata (German, Hardcover)
Maria Tziatzi, Margarethe Billerbeck, Franco Montanari, Kyriakos Tsantsanoglou
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R4,673
Discovery Miles 46 730
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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