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Exploring the classical world - Audio
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Exploring the classical world - Audio

Author: The Open University

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Exploring the classical world introduces texts by Homer, Horace, Juvenal and others, placing them in their social and political context and assessing their value as historical sources. Readings in the original Latin or Greek and in translation illustrate the metric structures used and the challenges of effectively recreating these works in modern English. The material is drawn from The Open University course A219 Exploring the classical world
12 Episodes
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A brief introduction to this album.
Interpreting Homer

Interpreting Homer

2009-07-2614:28

Reading' classical texts and the differing philosophies of translation, with a dramatised example from the Lattimore translation of Homer's Odyssey.
Homer's people

Homer's people

2009-07-2610:33

Metaphor, imagery, characterisation and the portrayal of strong emotion in Homer's Odyssey, with dramatised excerpts from book iv.
Homer's world

Homer's world

2009-07-2612:56

The power of the Gods and the nature of Homeric heroes, including a reading from the original Greek and dramatisations from Odyssey book v.
Comparing and evaluating translations of Homer, focusing on Lattimore, and the difficulties and decisions involved.
Different approaches to recreating the original Homeric experience in prose, poetry and on stage.
The love poetry of Catullus and his place in contemporary Roman society, with readings in Latin and translation.
The role of Catullus and his poetry in political and personal rivalries in the late Roman Republic.
The sounds and rhythms of Latin poetry, focusing on the Alcaic form with readings from Horace's ode 3.6.
The sounds and rhythms of Roman Elegiac poetry, with readings in Latin and translation.
Using Roman satirical writing to discover social history.
The motivations of Juvenal in his satirical works, with readings in Latin and in translation of Satire 5.
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