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Hesiod Works and Days

Hesiod Works and Days( )
Editor: Hamilton, Richard
Rainis, Ellen G.
Ruttenberg, Rebecca L.
Author: Hesiod,
Series title:Bryn Mawr Commentaries, Greek Ser.
ISBN:978-0-929524-54-2
Publication Date:Jan 1988
Publisher:Bryn Mawr Commentaries
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $11.50
Book Description:

Bryn Mawr Commentaries provide clear, concise, accurate, and consistent support for students making the transition from introductory and intermediate texts to the direct experience of ancient Greek and Latin literature. They assume that the student will know the basics of grammar and vocabulary and then provide the specific grammatical and lexical notes that a student requires to begin the task of interpretation.

Book Details
Pages:64
Detailed Subjects: Literary Criticism / Ancient & Classical
Book Weight:0.185 Pounds
Author Biography
Hesiod (Editor)
The poet Hesiod tells us that his father gave up sea-trading and moved from Ascra to Boeotia, that as he himself tended sheep on Mount Helicon the Muses commanded him to sing of the gods, and that he won a tripod for a funeral song at Chalcis.

The poems credited to him with certainty are: the Theogony, an attempt to bring order into the otherwise chaotic material of Greek mythology through genealogies and anecdotes about the gods; and The Works and Days, a wise sermon addressed to his brother Perses as a result of a dispute over their dead father's estate. This latter work presents the injustice of the world with mythological examples and memorable images, and concludes with a collection of folk wisdom.

Uncertain attributions are the Shield of Heracles and the Catalogue of Women. Hesiod is a didactic and individualistic poet who is often compared and contrasted with Homer, as both are representative of early epic style. "Hesiod is earth-bound and dun colored; indeed part of his purpose is to discredit the brilliance and the ideals of heroism glorified in the homeric tradition. But Hesiod, too, is poetry, though of a different order. . . " (Moses Hadas, N.Y. Times).

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