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Chargement... The Works and Days; Theogony; The Shield of Herakles (Ann Arbor Paperbacks) (édition 1991)par Hesiod, Richard Lattimore (Traducteur)
Information sur l'oeuvreThéogonie. Les Travaux et les jours. Le Bouclier par Hesiod
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. I appreciate Lattimore's style, but there is no saving this sad summation of Hellenic cosmogonic mythology by the wannabe Homer, Hesiod. His work in Theogony is to me the precursor of the genealogical fantastic storytelling that has come to plague the Fantasy genre, inundating it with an interminable deluge of minutiae to please people who seek bloated world-building at the expense of actual literary artistry. A partial guide to the gods is provided, which is somewhat helpful. Gaia is one of the original four gods (along with Chaos, Darkness, and Night), and she and her offspring made more and more offspring. Theogony outdoes the Bible in listing the names of all of these by the dozens upon dozens upon dozens. It must have been quite a feat to recite all of this by memory but that's what was done. Works and Days is full of aphorisms, and Shield describes the imaginatively profuse artwork on the shield of Herakles, which includes all sorts of scenes of war, peace and strife. Tbh, I found it all pretty dry compared to the works Xenophon, Sophocles, Homer or Virgil, but it was still worthwhile given its age, and relatively short. Well over half of this particular book was commentary on the texts. TEOGONIA, TRABAJOS Y DÍAS,ESCUDO, CERTAMEN Las obras de Hesíodo conforman con las de Homero los pilares fundacionales de la cultura griega. Al conjunto de mitos heredados que ambos toman y exponen, Hesíodo agrega una interpretación moral y práctica: en Teogonía y en Trabajos y días subyace la idea de un orden que se alcanza en virtud de actos de justicia divina y está representado por la autoridad de Zeus. Teogonía presenta extensamente el mundo de los dioses, con su origen y descendencia, y Trabajos y días se ocupa de la realidad humana, en que se destaca el trabajo del campo y otras actividades del hombre. La mayor originalidad de Hesíodo reside en la relación que establece entre el yo poético y la creación del poema. En Teogonía se consagra como intérprete de las Musas, y procura explicar el sentido del mundo divino hasta el triunfo de Zeus, quien encarna la justicia y el orden: allí está la “verdad” que las Musas han de enseñar. En Trabajos y días se cristaliza una tradición poética didáctica, unida al elevado estilo de la épica, pinceladas líricas y andamiajes dramáticos al modo de una conversación; sobresale allí el tema de la injusticia en la tierra: merced al trabajo se puede restituir el orden del mundo. El combate con Cicno contenido en Escudo es el único episodio legendario que presenta a Heracles con el armamento completo de un guerrero épico, no sólo con arco y maza; sigue el modelo homérico de la descripción del escudo de Aquiles en Ilíada, a la vez que incorpora elementos intimidantes, representaciones de animales, escenas mitológicas y cuadros simbólicos. Labor poética y cotidianidad campesina están ilustradas de modo legendario por el poema en prosa y verso Certamen, que imagina a Hesíodo y Homero como rapsodas; el triunfo del primero subraya el interés didáctico de mostrar su superioridad como poeta de la paz frente a la poesía homérica, que canta hechos bélicos. This is the real thing. A man (or the narrator) talking about Greek life 2500 years ago, with absolute authority, because he lives it. The Works and Days is down-to-earth advice to a younger brother about how to get on in life, the Theogony contains tales of the gods, tales of their origins, their relationships to each other and to the Ancient Greeks. Again, the real thing, not as retold by Hollywood, but straight from the mind of someone who lives there. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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English summary: Hesiods Theogony, Works and Days, and The Shield of Heracles, each an essential classic of Greek mythology and literature, are presented here in a new critical edition, with ample notes, analyses, indices, and scholarly introductions. French description: D'ou vient-on? Que faire? Voila ce que les Muses revelerent a Hesiode au pied de l'Helicon. Nous ne savons rien de certain sur le poete, si ce n'est par lui-meme: berger de Beotie, il fut en conflit avec son frere. Nombreuses sont pourtant les legendes qu'il suscita, des l'Antiquite. La Theogonie, relate la naissance du monde, depuis le chaos initial jusqu'a l'avenement du pouvoir de Zeus et la separation des hommes et des dieux. Les Travaux et les Jours, nes de la querelle avec son frere, sont une serie de conseils tant pratiques que moraux. Le Bouclier, dont l'authenticite est contestee, raconte les aventures d'Heracles. L'inestimable edition de Paul Mazon presente de maniere claire et synthetique les elements biographiques qui sont a notre disposition ainsi que la tradition manuscrite. Le texte est complete par un riche apparat critique et chaque poeme est precede d'une notice qui analyse la structure de l'oeuvre et propose des pistes de lecture. L'ouvrage est assorti d'un precieux index nominum. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)881.01Literature Greek and other Classical languages Greek Classical poetry Different categories of Greek classical poetry Philosophy and TheoryClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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…. Yeah, I feel like I like Hesiod better than Homer. Some of it seems rather useful, more educational-religious, although of course much of it is random people just being boss, of course. And there is some overlap, of course, since heroes are like gods, and religion involves the human as well as the divine, (sometimes you lose sight of that in Christianity, with the whole Jesus saves you suck thing, “remember to tell God you’re a sinner”), and obvs Zeus is every boy’s fantasy, right—which is both very boss, and a little…. “And finally, at the top of the head is the Crown Chakra.” (Zeus) (pointing to Sacral Chakra) “Got my Crown Chakra right here, bitches.”
But the antique farming advice is actually quite interesting; I feel like the lived details of experience really mean as much as the abstractions; I’m not going to tell you what I learned, because it’s easy to write it off as boring/un-abstract or whatever, but I was lost driving along these crappy rural roads for like an hour yesterday, and I feel like I learned a lot about life, you know…. And the actual magical/superstitious qualities of days (days numbered in the lunar month? Or the solar month?) in “Works and Days” is really cool; I regret that it’s not longer….
But yeah, Hesiod is also kind of a bastard, much of the time, right. Hesiod war ein Mann, Kinder. Hesiod was a man, children. Although he wrote about the most rational, Kantian things, like how wives are bitches, and killing wild animals is both economically effective, (cartoon voice), and, fun! And on an unrelated—totally unrelated—note, he also loved golden Aphrodite…. Although, having accomplished his desire, 😉, he immediately got up and went off to kill more wild animals, right….