Elizabeth Vandiver Songtexte
Geboren 1956
Songtexte
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- The Ionian Enlightenment
- “First Was Chaos”
- Other Tragedians and a Comedian
- The Greatest Hero of All
- The Terrible House of Atreus
- Oedipus the King, II
- Odysseus Tells His Own Story
- The Paradox of Glory
- Two Tragedians, One Hero
- The Sophoclean Hero
- Rome, Augustus, and Virgil
- Introduction
- The Opening of the Aeneid
- Culture, Prehistory, and the "Great Goddess"
- The Oresteia — Agamemnon
- Apollo and Artemis
- From Troy to Carthage
- Achilles and Hektor
- Greek Husband, Foreign Wife
- Blood Vengeance, Justice, and the Furies
- Darius and the Scythians
- Herodotus, the Peloponnesian War, and Thucydides
- Immortals and Mortals
- What Is Myth?
- “Gods Are Useful”
- The Oresteia — Mythic Background
- "Inquiry" and the Birth of History
- The Role of the Gods
- The Death of Patroklos
- The Trojan War and the Archaeologists
- Phaedra, Hippolytus, and Aphrodite's Wrath
- Persons, Personalities, and Peoples
- Myth, Legend, and Oral Tradition
- Scope, Design, and Organization of the Histories
- The Battles of Thermopylae and Artemisium
- Tragedy Defined
- Italy and the Future
- Why Is Myth?
- Monstrous Females and Female Monsters
- Reunion and Return
- Recognitions and Revenge
- The Reign of the Olympians
- Euripides and the Gods
- Laughter-Loving Aphrodite
- The Eleusinian Mysteries and the Afterlife
- Herodotus and History
- Oedipus the King, I
- Glory, Honor, and the Wrath of Achilles
- Homeric Epic and the East-West Conflict
- History or Literature-Or Both?
- The Tragic Legacy
- Reunion and Resolution
- Virgil's Iliad
- Euripides on War and Women
- Herodotus' Account of Egypt
- Aftermath and Influence
- The Tragedies of King Oedipus
- A Goddess and a Princess
- The Last Plays of Euripides
- The Oresteia — Libation Bearers and Eumenides
- Funeral Games and a Journey to the Dead
- The Homeric Question
- From Persephone's Land to the Island of Helios
- Demeter, Persephone, and the Conquest of Death
- Within the Walls of Troy
- Democracy, Culture, and Tragedy
- The Three Electras
- Croesus, Solon, and Human Happiness
- The Longest Day
- Sparta and the Spartan Way of Life
- Humans, Heroes, and Half-Gods
- Introduction to Homeric Epic
- The Gods, Fate, and the Supernatural
- The Gods and Fate
- Roots of a Genre
- Theseus and the "Test-And-Quest" Myth
- The Trojan War
- From Myth to History and Back Again
- The Embassy to Achilles
- The Inevitable Doom of Turnus
- The Victory of Greece
- The Goddess, the Swineherd, and the Beggar
- Heroes' Homecomings
- A Master of Spectacle
- Antigone and Creon
- Production and Stagecraft
- Euripides the Anti-Tragedian
- Odysseus and Penelope
- Cyrus and the Foundation of the Persian Empire
- The End of the Aeneid and Beyond
- Athens in the Archaic Age
- Roman Founders, Roman Fables
- The Last Plays of Sophocles
- The Ionian Revolt and the Battle of Marathon
- Odysseus Among the Phaiakians
- Guests and Hosts
- The Ascension of Darius
- Politics and Culture in Fifth-Century Athens
- Unhappy Dido
- Enemies' Tears — Achilles and Priam
- Xerxes and the Threat to Greece
- Aeschylus — Creator of an Art Form
- Achilles Returns to Battle
- From Aeneas to Romulus
- From Ovid to the Stars
- Hermes and Dionysos
- The Beginnings of the Conflict
- Lecture 5b: From Troy To Carthage
- Lecture 5c: From Troy To Carthage
- Lecture 5a: From Troy To Carthage
- Lecture 11b: The Gods And Fate
- Lecture 4e: The Opening Of The Aeneid
- Lecture 12f: The End Of The Aeneid And Beyond
- Lecture 7c: Funeral Games And A Journey To The Dead
- Lecture 2d: From Aeneas To Romulus
- Lecture 9e: Virgil's Illiad
- Lecture 2b: From Aeneas To Romulus
- Lecture 9b: Virgil's Illiad
- Lecture 5f: From Troy To Carthage
- Lecture 3b: Rome, Augustus And Virgil
- Lecture 5e: From Troy To Carthage
- Lecture 11e: The Gods And Fate
- Lecture 2f: From Aeneas To Romulus
- Lecture 12b: The End Of The Aeneid And Beyond
- Lecture 6e: Unhappy Dido
- Lecture 5d: From Troy To Carthage
- Lecture 10c: The Inevitable Doom Of Turnus
- Lecture 9f: Virgil's Illiad
- Lecture 1a: Introduction
- Lecture 7d: Funeral Games And A Journey To The Dead
- Lecture 3f: Rome, Augustus And Virgil
- Lecture 3a: Rome, Augustus And Virgil
- Lecture 4f: The Opening Of The Aeneid
- Lecture 8f: Italy And The Future
- Lecture 6b: Unhappy Dido
- Lecture 11d: The Gods And Fate
- Lecture 8e: Italy And The Future
- Lecture 7a: Funeral Games And A Journey To The Dead
- Lecture 1e: Introduction
- Lecture 9c: Virgil's Illiad
- Lecture 1c: Introduction
- Lecture 4a: The Opening Of The Aeneid
- Lecture 10d: The Inevitable Doom Of Turnus
- Lecture 12c: The End Of The Aeneid And Beyond
- Lecture 2a: From Aeneas To Romulus
- Lecture 3e: Rome, Augustus And Virgil
- Lecture 11f: The Gods And Fate
- Lecture 4c: The Opening Of The Aeneid
- Lecture 2c: From Aeneas To Romulus
- Lecture 1f: Introduction
- Lecture 8b: Italy And The Future
- Lecture 8c: Italy And The Future
- Lecture 10e: The Inevitable Doom Of Turnus
- Lecture 11a: The Gods And Fate
- Lecture 8d: Italy And The Future
- Lecture 4b: The Opening Of The Aeneid
- Lecture 2e: From Aeneas To Romulus
- Lecture 3d: Rome, Augustus And Virgil
- Lecture 10a: The Inevitable Doom Of Turnus
- Lecture 8a: Italy And The Future
- Lecture 6d: Unhappy Dido
- Lecture 7e: Funeral Games And A Journey To The Dead
- Lecture 12d: The End Of The Aeneid And Beyond
- Lecture 12e: The End Of The Aeneid And Beyond
- Lecture 6c: Unhappy Dido
- Lecture 6f: Unhappy Dido
- Lecture 9d: Virgil's Illiad
- Lecture 6a: Unhappy Dido
- Lecture 7b: Funeral Games And A Journey To The Dead
- Lecture 4d: The Opening Of The Aeneid
- Lecture 7f: Funeral Games And A Journey To The Dead
- Lecture 3c: Rome, Augustus And Virgil
- Lecture 10f: The Inevitable Doom Of Turnus
- Lecture 11c: The Gods And Fate
- Lecture 9a: Virgil's Illiad
- Lecture 12a: The End Of The Aeneid And Beyond
- Lecture 1d: Introduction
- Lecture 10b: The Inevitable Doom Of Turnus
- Lecture 1b: Introduction