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Hippolytos (Paperback)
Euripides; Translated by Robert Bagg
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R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In most versions of the Hippolytos myth, Phaidra is depicted as an utterly debauched character, a woman reduced to shamelessness by the power of Aphrodite. In Euripides' Hippolytos, however--informed by the playwright's moral and religious fascination--we find a Phaidra resisting the goddess of love with all her strength, though in the end unsuccessfully. Phaidra becomes a tragic foil for Hippolytos, making his superhuman virtue at once believable and understandable. Robert Bagg's profound translation of this Euripidean masterpiece is idiomatic, natural, and intensely lyrical, designed not only to be read but performed. Unlike most versions, Bagg's Hippolytos sustains the dramatic tome and dynamics to the very end--even after Phaidra's death--and the moving scenes between Hippolytos and Theseus, and later Hippolytos' death-scene with Artemis, receive here unprecedented plausibility and power.
THE TANDEM RIDE is a book that follows the poet, teacher and
translator Robert Bagg on various outdoor, deskbound, and romantic
adventures, from boyhood through adolescence and maturity into old
age. The poems are often composed in narrative blank verse or
traditional forms, including Spenserian stanzas and sonnet
sequences. Bagg's comfort zone has remained since his college days
within the heady precincts of Greek myth, while writing about
contemporary subjects in colloquial American speech.
Patronage studies are an important part of modern Italian
Rnaissance art history. This book looks at how and why the Sassetti
Chapel in Santa Trinit was made. What induced the patron to have it
decorated, why did he choose the particular church and why as his
chosen painter did he choose Domenico Ghirlandaio. The patrons
interest in promoting his image both on earth and in heaven are
important factors in any Renaissance patronage study none more so
given the bitter rivalry for the favour of Lorenzo de Medici
between Francesco Sassetti and his banking rival Giovanni
Tornabuoni. These two conducted and extensive campaign for the
right to have decorated the main chapel in Santa Maria Novella.
Sassetti having failed in his bid, not least as he wanted his
chapel dedicated to his name saint then had Ghirlandaio create one
of the great Florentine fresco cycles.
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