Gregory Nagy, "The Ancient Greek Hero in 24 Hours: Sourcebook"
English | 2020 | ASIN: N/A | 1039 pages | EPUB / MOBI / PDF | 9.3 MB
English | 2020 | ASIN: N/A | 1039 pages | EPUB / MOBI / PDF | 9.3 MB
The ancient Greeks’ concept of “the hero” was very different from what we understand by the term today, Gregory Nagy argues—and it is only through analyzing their historical contexts that we can truly understand Achilles, Odysseus, Oedipus, and Herakles.
In Greek tradition, a hero was a human, male or female, of the remote past, who was endowed with superhuman abilities by virtue of being descended from an immortal god. Despite their mortality, heroes, like the gods, were objects of cult worship. Nagy examines this distinctively religious notion of the hero in its many dimensions, in texts spanning the eighth to fourth centuries BCE: the Homeric Iliad and Odyssey; tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides; songs of Sappho and Pindar; and dialogues of Plato. All works are presented in English translation, with attention to the subtleties of the original Greek, and are often further illuminated by illustrations taken from Athenian vase paintings.
The fifth-century BCE historian Herodotus said that to read Homer is to be a civilized person.
This sourcebook contains thousands of pages of Classical works by Homer, Hesiod, Aeschylus, Plato and a few others.
It is best used in pair with Nagy's The Ancient Greek Hero in 24 Hours.