Curated Books

Four URLs, Limitless Apps: Separation of Concerns in the Homer Multitext Architecture

back D.N. Smith, C.W. Blackwell Abstract This paper summarizes both the underlying scholarly model and the implementation as network services of the scholarly repository of the Homer Multitext project (HMT). We fully expose the rich data repository of the HMT in four network services, keyed by citation of objects using URN notation. Introduction While Gregory Nagy’s prolific publication record will be familiar to all readers of this Festschrift, we… Read more

Les déesses au métier : Isis et Perséphone tisserandes

back Françoise Labrique – Ioanna Papadopoulou 1. Perséphone arrhéphore Les pages qui suivent parlent du tissage, des dieux, de Grèce et d’Egypte. Nous avons choisi cette thématique pour rendre hommage à la réflexion de Gregory Nagy, qui s’intéresse tout particulièrement au tissage, mais qui est aussi comparatiste. Façon de rendre aussi hommage à un beau travail qui se réfère à l’Egypte, quand il associe la symbolique de la fondation… Read more

Greek, Latin and a Global Dialogue among Civilizations

back Gregory Crane “Its bigger than all of us” – Gregory Nagy (on many occasions) Abstract Greek and Latin are foundational languages in the cultural heritage of humanity as a whole. Students of these languages have an opportunity—and arguably a primary obligation—to make sources in Greek and Latin advance a broader dialogue among civilizations. Such a shift in focus demands a shift in the intellectual culture of Greek and… Read more

À propos de l’image du chien “carnassier” en Grèce et de la théorie de l’animal “impur”

back Stella Georgoudi École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris Au début du chant XXII de l’Iliade, lorsque le terrible Achille, plein de fureur, impitoyable, se plante devant les portes de Troie, en menaçant la cité et ses habitants, Priam supplie son fils Hector de rentrer dans la ville et de ne pas s’obstiner à se battre avec ce rapide et violent guerrier. Dans sa longue supplication, le vieux… Read more

A Poetic Etymology of Pietas in the Aeneid

back Leonard Muellner A reminiscence, to begin with: of a dozen graduate students and Greg, meeting as usual, after a Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin class in “friendly” Lehman Hall, for coffee and talk; a hall the size of a railroad station waiting room, all of us on either side of one of a dozen long, rectangular tables that filled it, apart from a cafeteria line at one… Read more

Conversations

back Ginan Rauf Introduction The first conversationalist was Socrates, who replaced this war of words by dialogue. Perhaps he did not invent dialogue, which was originally a Sicilian mime or puppet play, but he introduced the idea that individuals couldn’t be intelligent on their own, that they need someone else to stimulate them. Before him, the model of all speech was the monologue: the wise man or the god… Read more

Soul and Kosmos. Menelaos and the Shield of Euphorbos in Didyma

back Alexander Herda, Berlin/Athens/Tübingen Though I know that I am serving here more or less owls on the cosmic plate to Greg, I nevertheless hope he will enjoy it. What I owe to his constant encouragement and help is of a much larger dimension. [*] The story of the wandering soul of Pythagoras In his description of the philosopher Pythagoras (c. 560–480 BCE), Diogenes… Read more

Untitled

back Danielle Arnold Freedman My being born in a tiny coal-mining village in Warwickshire, England, Harvard may have seemed an unobvious destination. However, I had been primed for it from the start by a favourite Uncle who had escaped in the preceding generation, to Canada. Equally unobviously I did an undergraduate degree in Classics, faking Greek from scratch until I made it. In the University bookstore, “Chapter and Verse,”… Read more

Pictures at a Transboundary Basilica

back Laurie Hart Fieldnote, August 1995, Prespa, Macedonia, Greece I wake to the sounds of my landlady, Irini, and her husband Markos talking quietly in the kitchen. She’s boiling maize that Markos will use as bait on his fish hooks and preparing to bake an enormous carp (grivadi) that he fished this morning, for family expected to arrive today—Markos’s sister Anna and her husband Pandelis on their annual summer… Read more