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BMCR-L: BMCR 01.08.02, Yun Lee Too, The Pedagogical Contract: Previous message ownerbmcr-l@brynmawr.edu BMCR 01.08.01 James Lee, A Commentary on quintus of smyrna . 01.08.02 Yun Lee http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu:8080/hyper-lists/bmcr-l/2001/0187.html
Listings Of The World Arts Classical Studies Greek Subcategories Cassius Dio (4) Diodorus Siculus (4) Herodotus (9), Homer(51) quintus of smyrna (2) Sappho (21), Thucydides (6) Xenophon (10). http://listingsworld.com/Arts/Classical_Studies/Greek/
Nonnus Summary and discussion of 12 articles published by RF Newbold from 1981-2001 on the 5th century Category Arts Classical Studies Greek 1. Space and Scenery in quintus of smyrna and Nonnus, Ramus 10 (1981)5368. . This article deals with cognitive space (the way http://www.nonnus.adelaide.edu.au/
Extractions: Nonnus Dionysiaca: S ummary and Discussion of 12 articles by R. F. Newbold This site is devoted to a review of over 20 years of my research into the longest epic to survive from antiquity, Nonnus Dionysiaca. This 48-book poem is over 21,000 hexameters long, considerably longer than the works of the great forerunner that Nonnus sought to surpass, Homer, whose Iliad runs to over 15, 000 lines, and his Odyssey, over 12,000. Apart from his origin in Panopolis in Egypt, and being the probable author of a verse paraphrase of the St. John Gospel and probably living in the 5 th Century C.E, nothing is known of a poet who has been widely dismissed as unreadable and decadent. Yet he was an influential author in his day. His work offers many rewards and provides much to admire for those willing to lay aside requirements that an author be a master of plot and character, and who can accept that Nonnus is more about theme and motif. That he will ever be elevated to the canon of must-read authors from antiquity or western literature is too much to hope for but it is pleasing to see the recent appearance of the first monograph on Nonnus in English, and an attempt to consolidate the partial rehabilitation that has occurred in recent years as understanding of the author and his methods and aims have deepened (R. Shorrock, The Challenge of Epic.
The Fall Of Troy By Quintus Smyrnaeus from the Encyclopedia of the Self by Mark Zimmerman. The Fall of Troyby. Quintus Smyrnaeus ( quintus of smyrna ) Fl. 4th Century AD. http://emotionalliteracyeducation.com/classic_books_online/ftroy10.htm
Written And Edited By Comstock Sculpture Studio Chester act of courage. The War At Troy quintus of smyrna Frederick M. Combellack(Translator) Publisher Barnes Noble Books. From Barnes http://www.artsales.com/Ancient Ships/nShipsbooklist1.htm
Extractions: Recommended Reading ListPage1 Based on Ancient Literature and History History Books Bargain Books: History The Greek Epic Poems and Histories The Odyssey (Fagles Translation) Publisher: Penguin USA Pub. Date: November 1997 Average Rating Five Stars: The reviews by readers speak for themselves From t he Publisher By its evocation of a real or imaged heroic age, its contrasts of character and its variety of adventure, above all by its sheer narrative power, the Odyssey has won and preserved its place among the greatest tales in the world. It tells of Odysseus' adventurous wanderings as he returns from the long war at Troy to his home in the Greek island of Ithaca, where his wife Penelope and his son Telemachus have been waiting for him for twenty years. He meets a one-eyed giant, Polyphemus the Cyclops; he visits the underworld; he faces the terrible monsters Scylla and Charybdis; he extricates himself from the charms of Circe and Calypso. After these and numerous other legendary encounters he finally reaches home, where, disguised as a beggar, he begins to plan revenge on the suitors who have for years been besieging Penelope and feasting on his own meat and wine with insolent impunity. The Iliad of Homer Translated: by Samuel Butler Publisher: Average Rating Five Stars: From the Publisher One of the greatest stories ever told
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Www.infomotions.com/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9503-clauss-commentary.txt Campbell's meticulous scholarship, familiar from those earlier volumes as well asfrom his commentaries on quintus of smyrna i Posthomerica XII /i (Leiden http://www.infomotions.com/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9503-clauss-commentary.txt
Extractions: Clauss, 'Commentary on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica III 1-471', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9503 URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9503-clauss-commentary 95.3.23, Campbell, Comm. on Apoll. Rhod. Arg. III.1-471 Malcolm Campbell, A Commentary on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica III 1-471 . Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1994. Pp. xxi, 424. $123.00. ISBN 90-04-10158-6. Reviewed by James J. Clauss University of Washington jjc@u.washington.edu The book under consideration is Malcolm Campbell's third major work on Apollonius, following his extremely useful Echoes and Imitations of Early Epic in Apollonius Rhodius (Leiden 1981) and Index Verborum in Apollonius Rhodium (Hildesheim 1983). Campbell's meticulous scholarship, familiar from those earlier volumes as well as from his commentaries on Quintus of Smyrna Posthomerica XII (Leiden 1981) and Moschus Europa (Hildesheim 1991), is much in evidence here. The reader should not be daunted by the 424 pages that cover 471 lines of Argonautica 3. The sheer variety of commentary, ranging from citation of parallels to in-depth interpretations of, for example, the tone of individual words or of the significance of pointed silences, should provide the stimulus to read the whole book from cover to cover. Campbell claims in his preface that it is his aim in this and subsequent volumes to provide a "comprehensive and fully documented commentary" on Book 3 of the
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Bryn Mawr Classical Review 95.03.23 Campbell's meticulous scholarship, familiar from those earlier volumes as well asfrom his commentaries on quintus of smyrna Posthomerica XII (Leiden 1981) and http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1995/95.03.23.html
Extractions: Reviewed by James J. Clauss, University of Washington (jjc@u.washington.edu). The book under consideration is Malcolm Campbell's third major work on Apollonius, following his extremely useful Echoes and Imitations of Early Epic in Apollonius Rhodius (Leiden 1981) and Index Verborum in Apollonius Rhodium (Hildesheim 1983). Campbell's meticulous scholarship, familiar from those earlier volumes as well as from his commentaries on Quintus of Smyrna Posthomerica XII (Leiden 1981) and Moschus Europa (Hildesheim 1991), is much in evidence here. The reader should not be daunted by the 424 pages that cover 471 lines of Argonautica 3. The sheer variety of commentary, ranging from citation of parallels to in-depth interpretations of, for example, the tone of individual words or of the significance of pointed silences, should provide the stimulus to read the whole book from cover to cover. Campbell claims in his preface that it is his aim in this and subsequent volumes to provide a "comprehensive and fully documented commentary" on Book 3 of the Argonautica , which will include a "systematic analysis of the Homeric subtext" (vii); this is precisely what the reader will encounter.
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2001.08.01 Alan James, Kevin Lee, A Commentary on quintus of smyrna, Posthomerica V. LeidenBrill, 2000. ISBN 9004-11594-3. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2001.08.01 http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2001/2001-08-01.html
Extractions: Post-Homerica . A succinct introduction precedes the detailed commentary. Accurate indices of subjects, references to ancient and mediaeval literature, and Greek words complete the volume. A. The Poem and its Date The manuscript history and the references to Quintus Smyrnaeus in ancient and Byzantine sources are handled solidly. The relatively new material suggesting that Quintus was the father of Dorotheus, a Christian priest martyred under Diocletian, is clearly and convincingly presented. In working toward a terminus post quem ex silentio B. Book 5 and its Sources Dionysiaca , Bk. 10, which also involves the killing of animals under the delusion that they are enemies). C. Beliefs and Interests Post-Homerica , but we should hardly expect to find any in a purposefully Homerizing epic. Perhaps the demonstrable Christian activity in Quintus' family and the lack of Christian expression in the Post-Homerica (along with the work of Nonnus, which includes two distinct epics, one an overtly pagan life of Dionysus and one a verse version of the Gospel of John) should suggest a strict separation of art and faith amongst some literate Christians.