A collection of essays dealing with different aspects of the fifth-century BC history and culture of the Greek island of Aegina, famous for its magnificent architecture and sculpture, and for its inhabitants' patronage of some of the greatest Classical poets.
A collection of essays dealing with different aspects of the fifth-century BC history and culture of the Greek island of Aegina, famous for its magnificent architecture and sculpture, and for its inhabitants' patronage of some of the greatest Classical poets.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
David Fearn is Assistant Professor in Greek LIterature, University of Warwick.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: Aegina in Contexts * I. Contexts for Heroic Myth-Making: Ethnicity, Interstate Relations, Cult, and Commerce * 1: Gregory Nagy: Asopos and his Multiple Daughters: Traces of Preclassical Epic in the Aeginetan Odes of Pindar * 2: James Watson: Rethinking the Sanctuary of Aphaia * 3: Ian Rutherford: 'The Thearion of the Pythian One': The Aeginetan Thearoi in Context * 4: Barbara Kowalzig: Musical Merchandise 'on every vessel': Religion and Trade on Aegina * II. Poetry, Performance, Politics * 5: David Fearn: Aeginetan Epinician Culture: Naming, Ritual, and Politics * 6: Andrew Morrison: Aeginetan Odes, Reperformance, and Intertextuality * III. Interfaces between Poetry, Myth, and Art * 7: Lucia Athanassaki: Giving Wings to the Aeginetan Sculptures: The Panhellenic Aspirations of Pindar's Eighth Olympian * 8: Henrik Indergaard: Thebes, Aegina, and the Temple of Aphaia: A Reading of Pindar's Isthmian 6 * 9: Guy Hedreen: The Trojan War, Theoxenia, and Aegina in Pindar's Paean 6 and the Aphaia Sculptures * IV. The Historiographical Aftermath * 10: Elizabeth Irwin: Herodotus on Aeginetan Identity * 11: Elizabeth Irwin: 'Lest the things done by men become exitêla': Writing up Aegina in a Late Fifth-Century Context
* Introduction: Aegina in Contexts * I. Contexts for Heroic Myth-Making: Ethnicity, Interstate Relations, Cult, and Commerce * 1: Gregory Nagy: Asopos and his Multiple Daughters: Traces of Preclassical Epic in the Aeginetan Odes of Pindar * 2: James Watson: Rethinking the Sanctuary of Aphaia * 3: Ian Rutherford: 'The Thearion of the Pythian One': The Aeginetan Thearoi in Context * 4: Barbara Kowalzig: Musical Merchandise 'on every vessel': Religion and Trade on Aegina * II. Poetry, Performance, Politics * 5: David Fearn: Aeginetan Epinician Culture: Naming, Ritual, and Politics * 6: Andrew Morrison: Aeginetan Odes, Reperformance, and Intertextuality * III. Interfaces between Poetry, Myth, and Art * 7: Lucia Athanassaki: Giving Wings to the Aeginetan Sculptures: The Panhellenic Aspirations of Pindar's Eighth Olympian * 8: Henrik Indergaard: Thebes, Aegina, and the Temple of Aphaia: A Reading of Pindar's Isthmian 6 * 9: Guy Hedreen: The Trojan War, Theoxenia, and Aegina in Pindar's Paean 6 and the Aphaia Sculptures * IV. The Historiographical Aftermath * 10: Elizabeth Irwin: Herodotus on Aeginetan Identity * 11: Elizabeth Irwin: 'Lest the things done by men become exitêla': Writing up Aegina in a Late Fifth-Century Context
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