Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | DAU | 881.01 HES (Browse shelf) | Available | 035719 |
880.9352 NAG Ancient Greek hero in 24 hours | 880.9353 MIL Dreams in late antiquity : studies in the imagination of a culture | 880.93543 CAR Eros the bittersweet : an essay | 881.01 HES Works and days | 881.010915 STR Birth of the symbol : ancient readers at the limits of their texts | 881.01093538 CAL Poetics of eros in Ancient Greece | 881.0109384 WIL Shame and necessity |
The ancient Greeks revered Hesiod, believing he had beaten Homer in a singing contest and that after his dead body was thrown to sea, it was brought back by dolphins. His Works and Days is one of the most important early works of Greek poetry. Ostensibly written by the poet to chide his lazy brother, it recounts the story of Pandora's box and humanity's decline since the Golden Age, and can be read as a celebration of rural life and a hymn to work.
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