Watson, George Ronald
THE ROMAN SOLDIER
Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing. DJ has light yellowing to top. Soiling to top of textblock. ; This book is a study of the life and training of the Roman soldier from enlistment to discharge. Covers the period of the Empire to the accession of Diocletian, and pays especial regard to ranks below the centurionate. Takes account not only of the legions and the auxiliary forces, but also of the praetorian guard and the urban cohorts, the Vigiles, and the imperial fleets. ; Aspects of Greek and Roman life; 256 pages
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Fantham, Elaine
COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN REPUBLICAN LATIN IMAGERY
Book has sticker stain on inner fly-page. Light chipping to top of dustjacket spine. A few closed tears to back panel. Shelfwear and rubbing to DJ. ; Analyses the conservative imagery of Terence and of Cicero's letters, contrasting this naturalistic language with the fantasies of Plautus and the formalization of Cicero's speeches. Numerous illustrative passages from Greek New Comedy, Terence, Plautus, and Cicero are reproduced in the text. ; Phoenix supplementary volume, 10; 222 pages
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Buckton, David
BYZANTIUM Treasures of Byzantine Art and Culture from British Collections
240 pages
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Jeffery, George
CYPRUS UNDER AN ENGLISH KING IN THE TWELFTH CENTURY The Adventures of Richard I. and the Crowning of His Queen in the Island
In endevouring to realize the circumstances of the first European occupation of Cyprus, la Vie Feodale de la Nobless of the period must be described in the light of modern research carried on by innumerable students of mediaeval history during the past half century : Viollet le Duc, Rey, Schlumberger and host of others. This sketch will fulfil its purpose if it serves as a reminder to those curious and interesting associations which link the beautiful island of Cyprus with England. To English-men, the heirs of the Anglo-Normans, such as associations of long ago, continued to some extent by the Levant Company of interviewing centuries, and now consolidated by the island becoming a regular British Colony, must always be of interest. ; Bibliotheca Historica Cypria; 185 pages
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Taylor, Thomas
THE ARGUMENTS OF THE EMPEROR JULIAN AGAINST THE CHRISTIANS Translated from the Greek Fragments Preserved by Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria; to Which Are Added Extracts from the Other Works of Julian Relative to the Christians
Exact Reprint of the Tetypeset original (1809) Chicago 1930 ARES PUBLISHERS INC. In his school edict Julian prohibits Christian teachers from using pagan scripts e. G. The Illias, that formed the core of Roman education. This was an attempt to remove some of the power of Christian schools by alienating their students from Roman society, not to mention a satirical attack at what Julian may have viewed as a hypocrisy: Christian schools teaching the Bible as the sole source of knowledge while simultaneously teaching classical pagan texts as well, knowledge of which was needed for success in Roman society. In his tolerance edict of 362, Julian decreed the reopening of pagan temples, the restitution of alienated temple properties, and called back Christian bishops that were exiled by church edicts. The latter was an instance of tolerance of different religious views, but may also have been an attempt by Julian to widen a schism between different Christian sects, further weakening the Christian movement as a whole. ; 8.25 x 0.5 x 5.5 Inches; 119 pages
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Jouguet, Pierre
ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND THE HELLENISTIC WORLD Macedonian Imperialism and the Hellenization of the East
8.5 x 1 x 5.5 Inches
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Miller, Helen Hill
SICILY AND THE WESTERN COLONIES OF GREECE
Edgewear to top of DJ's spine. Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing. ; Looks at the Greek cities in Sicily and southern Italy. A comprehensive survey of Sicilian history, an appreciation of its arts and legends, and a look at its landscapes and ancient monuments. Contents: On names, places, sources. 1). The power of Typhoes. 2). Land of epic heroes. 3). When the Greeks came. 4). Rush of arrival. 5). Hera's Italian votive. 6). Two vigilant enemies. 7). The magnificent tyrants. 8). The western defense. 9). View from Euryalus. 10). The path to empire. 11). Figures of later legend. ; Campus outlines; 219 pages
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Grube, G. M. A
THE GREEK AND ROMAN CRITICS
Shelfwear to book. Former owner's signature on front endpaper. DJ has a piece missing from top of spine. DJ is torn along top of spine. Soiling and a few nicks to DJ. ; During the thousand years which separate Homer from Plotinus, the Greeks and Romans not only created two great literatures and most of our literary genres; they also developed theories of literature and methods of criticism. These, though very different from our own, have nevertheless greatly influenced modern thinking, especially during the early centuries of our modern literatures. Poets like Pindar, Aristophanes and Horace, philosophers like Plato, aristotle and Philodemus, orators like Cicero and Quintilian, literary scholars like Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Longinus, all these have left us records of their various points of view. In this book Professor Grube, who is a recognized authority in this field, gives us a clear, full and reliable analysis of the ancient critical texts, and traces the birth and developments of critical thinking thoughout the classical centuries. ; 372 pages
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Hanfmann, George Maxim Anossov
ROMAN ART A Modern Survey of the Art of Imperial Rome
Corners are no longer sharp. Closed tear (1") on back cover near spine. ; 52 full page colour plates, and 163 gravure illustrations; 7.25 x 0.75 x 6.25 Inches; 328 pages
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Thalmann, William G.
DRAMATIC ART IN AESCHYLUS'S SEVEN AGAINST THEBES
Slight edgewear. Slight fading to cover gilt. ; Professor Thalmann researches Greek epic and drama. In particular, he studies how performances of ancient texts were the occasion for the convergence of class and gender discourses and the role of these texts within contemporary social and political processes. He is also interested in approaches to ancient cultures through anthropology and political theory. ; Yale Classical Monographs; 0.79 x 9.47 x 6.38 Inches; 193 pages
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Samuel, Alan E.
THE PROMISE OF THE WEST The Greek World, Rome, and Judaism
Bowing to front board. Back cover has small indentations throughout. Soiling to text block. ; 432 pages
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Scullard, H. H & A. A. M. Van Der Heyden
SHORTER ATLAS OF THE CLASSICAL WORLD
Dustjacket has shelfwear and rubbing. Dustjacket has a few small nicks and tears. DJ is price-clipped. ; 238 pages
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Adrados, Francisco Rodriguez
FESTIVAL, COMEDY AND TRAGEDY The Greek Origins of Theatre
Slight sticker residue on spine. Former owner's stamp on fly-page. Foxing to top textblock. ; Analytic Study of Greek Theatre; 470 pages
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Willetts, R. F
ARISTOCRATIC SOCIETY IN ANCIENT CRETE
Large tear to dustjacket at top of spine. Dustjacket has shelfwear and rubbing. Former owner's signature on front fly-page. ; Study of the social, economic, political and legal institutions of Crete from the beginnings of the historical period until the Roman conquest of the Island. ; 280 pages
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King, Katherine Callen
HOMER
Light shelfwear. Light discoloration to bottom of boards. Ex-library copy with a few stamps. Pocket has been removed. ; Three essays written for, and two others translated for the collection are among the 19 studies of the impact of the Iliad and the Odyssey on succeeding ages since the fifth century BC. Among the writers considered are George Chapman (who first translated Homer into English in 1598) , Pope, Milton, Kafka, Goethe, Racine, Keats, Tolstoy, Joyce, and recent Nobel Laureate Derek Walcott . Looks at Homer's influence from Antiquity to the twentieth century. ; Garland Reference Library of the Humanities; 9 x 0.75 x 6 Inches; 330 pages
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Nagy, Gregory
PINDAR'S HOMER The Lyric Possession of An Epic Past
Light soiling to textblock. Light crease to corner. ; Nagy challenges the widely held view that the development of lyric poetry in Greece represents the rise of individual innovation over collective tradition. Arguing that Greek lyric represents a tradition in its own right, Nagy shows how the form of Greek epic is in fact a differentiation of forms found in Greek lyric. ; 1.35 x 9.04 x 6.04 Inches; 414 pages
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Nisetich, Frank J.
PINDAR AND HOMER
Light shelfwear and rubbing. ; Considers four odes which demonstrate how Pindar has borrowed and creatively transformed mythological figures, religious ideas, and epic diction from Homer or the epic cycle. ; AJP Monographs in Classical Philology, No. 4; 9.5 x 0.5 x 6.5 Inches; 112 pages
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Clark, Matthew
OUT OF LINE Homeric Composition Beyond the Hexameter
Very light shelfwear ; Building upon the groundbreaking work of Milman Parry and Albert Lord, "Out of Line" presents a new theory of Homeric composition, focusing upon patterns that extend beyond the boundary of the line and the clause. Matthew Clark takes enjambment as a starting point, analyzing the techniques used by the poet to complete a line that begins with a runover. Clark proceeds to propose two levels of analysis, a "deep-structure" level, which describes the associations of words and ideas before they take metrical form, and a "surface-structure" level, which describes the words as they are employed on any particular occasion. "Out of Line" combines formulaic and metrical analysis, expanding the study of Homeric meter both in practice, by taking into account larger compositional structures such as entire scenes, and in theory, by using the results to test models of formulaic composition. This book is important for students and scholars of Homer, epic, and oral literature. ; 0.83 x 9.29 x 6.19 Inches; 264 pages
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Fenik, Bernard
HOMER AND THE NIBELUNGENLIED Comparative Studies in Epic Style
Bumping to corners. Light soiling to boards. ; A sturyd of certain kinds of artistic design shared by the ancient Greek and medieval European epic. Also looks at Chanson de Roland and Rolandslied. ; Martin Classical Lectures; 0.87 x 9.64 x 6.45 Inches; 230 pages
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Clarke, Howard W.
THE ART OF THE ODYSSEY
Bottom corner of pages are creased else NF. ; Provides criticism, sound scholarship, and systematic explication of the characters, action, events, and artistic devices of the Odyssey. ; 0.29 x 9.03 x 6.01 Inches; 120 pages
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Gentili, Bruno; Cole, A. Thomas
POETRY AND ITS PUBLIC IN ANCIENT GREECE From Homer to the Fifth Century
Light bump to bottom of spine. ; This superb and fascinating book insists upon trying to place the poetry of Sappho, Alcaeus, Pindar, Archilochus, and others within its social and ritual contexts: oral performance, patron/poet relationship, and religious or communal function. Considering the evidence, such efforts must at times rely upon inspiration, but the close textual readings of individual poems, judicious use of anthropological method, and inclusion of many of the recently discovered fragments creates a vivid picture. ; 0.97 x 8.94 x 6.08 Inches; 408 pages
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Vivante, Paolo
THE ILIAD Action As Poetry
Light rubbing to one corner of DJ. ; The author describes the poem's historical context, explores the structure of the narrative and discusses the poetic quality of the work. The book surveys other criticisms of the work, and suggests some of its own. ; Twayne's Masterwork Studies; 9.25 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 150 pages
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Sienkewicz, Thomas J.
CLASSICAL EPIC An Annotated Bibliography
Bibliography of Greek and Roman epic including Homer's Iliad and Odyssey and Vergil's Aeneid; Magill Bibliographies; 1.09 x 9.18 x 6.46 Inches; 265 pages
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Stewart, Douglas J
THE DISGUISED GUEST Rank, Role, and Identity in the Odyssey
Bottom edge of back board shows indentations. DJ is slightly soiled. Dustjacket has a few small nicks and tears. ; Attempts to find the meaning of the Odyssey in its entirety. ; 221 pages
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Mason, Harold Andrew
TO HOMER THROUGH POPE An Introduction to Homer's Iliad and Pope's Translation
Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. Dustjacket is protected in mylar. ; As fewer and fewer people learn to read ancient Greek, there is a need for a critical study of the most influential translations that have been made from the major works of ancient Greek literature. Mason’s monograph offers exactly that for readers of the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey. " More particularly, he presents a persuasive argument for reading Alexander Pope’s translation, his accompanying notes, and his "Essay on Criticism. " These merit careful study, for they illuminate Pope’s principles as a translator and constitute one of the most intelligent and penetrating commentaries on the poetic qualities of the epics ever written in English. Mason’s new insights, along with his stringent and lively comments, will bring readers closer to a real understanding of Homer, whether they read him in the original or come to him in translation for the first time. They will also find here a masterly appreciation of Pope. ; 216 pages
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Collins, Christopher
AUTHORITY FIGURES Metaphors of Mastery from the Iliad to the Apocalypse
Reveals how certain strategic metaphors embedded in the early Western literary canon have promoted--and continue to promote--systems of inequality and social control. Collins examines texts ranging from the Homeric epics and the Platonic dialogues to Virgil's "Aeneid" and the "Book of Revelation". Drawing on the linguistic and documentary evidence of usages in early societies, chiefly Greek and Hebrew, Collins has produced a penetrating examination of social and personal structures in those worlds. ; 9.5 x 0.75 x 6.5 Inches; 196 pages
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Louden, Bruce
THE ODYSSEY Structure, Narration, and Meaning
Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing. ; 0.98 x 9.37 x 6.31 Inches; 208 pages; Bruce Louden's bold re-reading of the Odyssey -- the first attempt in years to map in detail the poem's overall structure -- offers new insights into the artistry of Odysseus' mythic voyage and enriches our understanding of Homer's masterful craftsmanship. Louden's groundbreaking work uncovers an extended narrative pattern, repeated in full three times, which reveals the poem's underlying skeletal structure. This organizational analysis helps to explain the existence of several characters or episodes sometimes dismissed as extraneous, as late additions, or even as corruptions to Homer's original intent. In addition, Louden's discovery strengthens the suggestion that the Odyssey was the product of oral tradition. By repeating this sequence of successive motifs, a single, improvising bard could explore a variety of complex ideas within a poem as long as the Odyssey. Though centrally concerned with the form of Homer's rich and complex plot, Louden's study is not exclusively, or even primarily, formalistic. His investigation involves the study of characters' names, challenges faced by Odysseus, the structure of the poem, and roles assigned to the poem's female characters. Louden's comprehensive achievement gives the reader a fresh perspective on the role of divine hostility and the artistry of an epic survivor on his timeless journey home.
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Vivante, Paolo
THE EPITHETS IN HOMER A Study in Poetic Values
Light soiling to textblock and boards. Former owner's name on ffep; Looks at the noun-epithet phrases in Homer. ; 222 pages
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Korus, Kazimierz
DIE GRIECHISCHE SATIRE Die Theoretischen Grundlagen Und Ihre Anwendung Auf Homers Epik
Front cover has some creasing. Top corner of pages are all creased. Good reading copy. ; Table of Contents: Forschungsstand, Charakter und Ziel der Arbeit; Auf der Suche nach einem eindeutigen Forschungskriterium: Untersuchungen zur Theorie der Menippeischen Satire; Die satirischen Dialoge Lukians; Das Komische in den satirischen Díalogen; Die Unterscheidungsmerkmale der satirischen Strukturen; Die satirischen Strukturen in Homers Epik; Thersites-Szene (Il. II 212-277) ; Das Lied des Demodokos über Ares und Aphrodite (Od. VIII 266-369). ; Prace historycznoliterackie; 144 pages
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Scholten, Joseph B.
THE POLITICS OF PLUNDER Aitolians and Their Koinon in the Early Hellenistic Era, 279-217 B. C.
Light shelfwear to DJ. ; Between 279 and 229 B. C. , the Aitolian koinon, a federation of mountain cantons in west central Greece, expanded to incorporate many of the neighboring lands and peoples lying between the Adriatic and Aegean Seas. This new political configuration contributed to the development of modern systems of federal democracy based on proportional representation. Despite these institutional advances, the Aitolians and their polity are reviled in the ancient historical tradition, which views them as backward, semi-barbarous brigands. The Politics of Plunder is the first English-language book in over a century to examine the political history of the Aitolian koinon in its era of expansion. Joseph Scholten presents a chronological reconstruction of the koinon's course of expansion, synthesizing a number of recent studies covering Aitolian topography, epigraphy, and institutional development that help to compensate for deficiencies in the ancient narrative record. His study is the first to ask how a people and a polity so detested by their contemporaries succeeded in making such fundamental contributions to their regional political culture. Scholten's careful investigation charts a middle course that neither whitewashes the Aitolians nor credulously accepts the biased ancient tradition. This balanced approach provides a much-needed fresh perspective on the Aitolians and their koinon. Discussing the history of the ancient Aegean Greek world and the political, economic, and social history of the Hellenistic Era, this book will interest anyone concerned with those subjects or fascinated by the development of ancient Greek political institutions and theories, particularly federalism. ; Hellenistic Culture and Society; 2.72 x 9.31 x 7.94 Inches; 339 pages
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Ager, Sheila L.
INTERSTATE ARBITRATIONS IN THE GREEK WORLD, 337-90 B.C
Hellenistic Culture and Society; 1.63 x 9.3 x 6.35 Inches; 579 pages; A great deal of information has come to light over the past several decades about the role of arbitration between the Greek states. Arbitration and mediation were, in fact, central institutions in Hellenistic public life. In this comprehensive study, Sheila Ager brings together the scattered body of literary and epigraphical sources on arbitration, together with up-to-date bibliographic references, and commentary.
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Cameron, Alan
CLAUDIAN Poetry and Propaganda At the Court of Honorius
Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing else NF. ; Later reprint by Sandpiper Books. As a propagandist Claudian offers unique illumination of the intrigues inside and between the rival courts of Milan and Constantinople in the decisive years following the death of Theodosius the Great. Though a Greek by birth, Claudian revived Latin poetry with a flair not seen since the Silver Age- and not to be seen again. This book studies Claudian's political and propagandist techniques, his accounts of Stilico's campaigns and rivals, his debt to Greek rhetorical theory and contemporary poetry, his culture, attitudes to Rome and its problems and, not least, his position as a pagan at a Christian court. ; 508 pages
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Post, Levi Arnold
FROM HOMER TO MENANDER Forces in Greek poetic fiction
Foxing to textblock. Shelfwear and rubbing to boards. Minor edgewear to corners. ; Looks at Greek epic, comedy and tragedy from a single viewpoint. ; Sather classical lectures; 333 pages
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Knight, W. F. Jackson
MANY-MINDED HOMER An Introduction
Ex-library copy with usual stamps, call numbers and pocket. Shelfwear. ; Edited by John D. Christie. Contents: Epic Poetry; Homeric Epic; The Time & Place of Homer; Trojan Story; Homeric Myth & Legend; The Sources of Homer; The Unity of Homer; The Greatness of Homer. ; 224 pages
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Pickman, Edward Motley
THE SEQUENCE OF BELIEF A Consideration of Religious Thought from Homer to Ockham
Spine has discoloration spots and traces of removed call number. Ex-library copy with usual stamps. Light edgewear and rubbing. ; 741 pages
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Beye, Charles Rowan
THE ILIAD, THE ODYSSEY, AND THE EPIC TRADITION
Very light foxing to top of textblock. Minor shelfwear and rubbing. ; 263 pages
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Anderson, Michael John & H. D. F. Kitto
CLASSICAL DRAMA AND ITS INFLUENCE Essays Presented to H. D. F. Kitto in Honour of His Retirement
Book is slightly cocked. Dustjacket has minor shelfwear and rubbing. ; Collection of essays range over the whole field of Drama from the function of the mask in the Greek Theatre to the undermining of the Classical Ideal in the Fair Theatres of Paris in the eighteenth century. ; 277 pages
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Griffith, Mark
THE AUTHENTICITY OF 'PROMETHEUS BOUND'
Soiling to textblock. Light shelfwear else Near Fine ; Still the most comprehensive book on the subject of the authorship of Prometheus Bound. ; Cambridge Classical Studies; 419 pages
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Vermeule, Emily Townsend
GÖTTERKULT
Light soiling. ; Band III, Kapitel V. Contents: Einfuhrung; Minoische Einflusse in der spathelladischen religiosen Tradition; Der mykenische Kult nach den archaologischen Zeugnissen; Der mykenische Kult nach den Linear B-- Dokumenten; Das Dunkle Zeitalter, eine Ubergangsphase; Der Götterkult bei Homer; Kultdenkmaler des homerischen Zeitalters; Zusammenfassrung; Literatur ; Archaeologia Homerica; 205 pages
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Forbes, Robert James
BERGBAU, STEINBRUCHTÄTIGKEIT UND HÜTTENWESEN
Light soiling. A few pages are uncut. ; Band II, Kapitel K. Contents: Bergwerke und Steinbruche; Die vorklassische Entwicklung des Huttenwesens; Metalle; Weiterverabeitung der Rohmetalle; Zusammenfassung; Bergmannische und metallurgische Fachausdrucke; Literatur. ; Archaeologia Homerica: Die Denkmäler Und Das Frühgriechische Epos. ; 43 pages
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Staten, Henry
EROS IN MOURNING From Homer to Lacan
Dustjacket has light rubbing. Light shelfwear. ; Eros in Mourning begins with a reading of the Iliad that shows how Homer, not yet influenced by the ideology of transcendence, analyzes the structure of unassuageable mourning in a way that is as up-to-date as the latest poststructuralism. Then, in readings of Dante, Hamlet, La Princess de Clèves, Heart of Darkness, and Lacan, Staten depicts the "thanato-erotic" hysteria that is set off by the specter of the dead and decomposing body that is also the body of sexual love and which, in the "transcendentalizing" tradition, is more female than male. Yet, St. John, certain troubadours, and Milton offer glimpses of a more affirmative relation to "eros in mourning. " ; 9.5 x 1 x 6.5 Inches; 248 pages
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Fenik, Bernard
HOMER AND THE NIBELUNGENLIED Comparative Studies in Epic Style
A sturyd of certain kinds of artistic design shared by the ancient Greek and medieval European epic. Also looks at Chanson de Roland and Rolandslied. ; Martin Classical Lectures; 0.87 x 9.64 x 6.45 Inches; 230 pages
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Lord, George De Forest
HEROIC MOCKERY Variations on Epic Themes from Homer to Joyce
Dustjacket is price-clipped, and rubbed. ; 8.75 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 162 pages
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Bornemann, Eduard
ODYSSEE INTERPRETATIONEN Zugleich Eine Einführung in Die Sprachlichen Und Sachlichen Probleme Des Epos
Shelfwear. Pages are yellowed. ; 8vo; 171 pages
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Gay, Federico Ferro
LOS FILÓSOFOS PRESOCRÁTICOS De Homero a Demócrito
Shelfwear; In Spanish/ En Espanol; 8vo; 149 pages
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Farnell, Lewis R.
OUTLINE HISTORY OF GREEK RELIGION
Light soiling to covers. Light general wear. ; Unchanged Reprint of 1921. Looks at the Origin of ancient Greek religion, its rites, its influence on society and culture as well as the origins of the gods and myths From Prehistoric Times until after the death of Alexander the Great ; 9 x 0.5 x 6 Inches; 160 pages
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Tod, Marcus Niebuhr
SIDELIGHTS ON GREEK HISTORY Three Lectures on the Light Thrown by Greek Inscriptions on the Life and Thought of the Ancient World.
Unchanged Reprint of 1932. Contents: I. Characteristics and Value of The Evidence Derived from Inscriptions; II. Inter-State Arbitration in the Greek World; III. Clubs and Societies in the Greek World. ; 9.5 x 0.5 x 6.25 Inches; 96 pages
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Hasebroek, Johannes
TRADE AND POLITICS IN ANCIENT GREECE
Checkmarks inscribed on table of Contents. Soiling to boards and textblock. ; Unchanged Reprint of 1933. Translated by L. M. Frazer and D. C. Macgregor. ; 9.25 x 1 x 6.25 Inches; 187 pages
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Rushforth, Gordon McNeil
LATIN HISTORICAL INSCRIPTIONS Illustrating the History of the Early Empire
Underlining in pen on a few pages, otherwise NF. Light foxing to textblock. ; Unchanged Reprint of 1930. Deciphers Latin inscriptions.
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Woolhouse, W. S. B.
HISTORICAL MEASURES, WEIGHTS, CALENDARS AND MONEYS OF ALL NATIONS And an Analysis of the Christian, Hebrew and Muhammadan Calendars (With Tables Up to 2000 A. D. )
Mild staining to pastedowns. Mild staining to boards. ; Unchanged Reprint of 1890. Contents: Standards; Computation of Coins and Bullion; General Principles of Exchange; Measures, Weights and Moneys; II. Measures of Time: Gregorian Calendar; Hebrew Calendar; Mahometan Calendar. ; 8 x 1 x 5 Inches
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