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Pindar

Journal of Hellenic Studies 86:174-175 (1966)

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  1. 'A mais bela brincadeira das Musas': poesia e verdade em Baquílides.Marta Várzeas - 2012 - Humanitas 64:9-20.
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  • Interprétations anciennes du fragment 62 d'Héraclite.Jean Pépin - 1970 - Dialogue 8 (4):549-563.
  • Achilles from Homer to the Masters of Late Archaic Poetry, or: From pathos to Splendour.Annamaria Peri - 2019 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 163 (1):1-15.
    Late archaic lyric poetry tends to obscure all pathetic and tragic elements of Achilles’ destiny present in the Iliad. The offence against his honour, his grief for Patroclus, his yearning for native Phthia, and a painful awareness of being ὠκύμορος – none of these themes play a role in the passages of Pindar, Bacchylides or Simonides where Achilles is mentioned. Yet each of these three poets operates differently with regard to the epic source, and it is worth investigating how they (...)
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  • Cyrene and Persia.B. M. Mitchell - 1966 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 86:99-113.
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  • Modern interpretation of Pindar: the second Pythian and seventh Nemean odes.Hugh Lloyd-Jones - 1973 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 93:109-137.
  • The “Rough Stones” of Aegina: Pindar, Pausanias, and the Topography of Aeginetan Justice.Leslie Kurke - 2017 - Classical Antiquity 36 (2):236-287.
    This paper considers Pindar's diverse appropriations of elements of the sacred topography of Aegina for different purposes in epinikia composed for Aeginetan victors. It focuses on poems likely performed in the vicinity of the Aiakeion for their different mobilizations of a monument that we know from Pausanias stood beside the Aiakeion—the tomb of Phokos, an earth mound topped with the “rough stone” that killed him. The more speculative final part of the paper suggests that it may also be possible to (...)
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  • Hagesias as Sunoikistêr.Margaret Foster - 2013 - Classical Antiquity 32 (2):283-321.
    In positioning his laudandus Hagesias as the co-founder of Syracuse, Pindar considers the larger ideological implications of including a seer in a colonial foundation. The poet begins Olympian 6 by praising Hagesias as an athletic victor, seer, and sunoikistêr and therefore as a figure of enormous ritual power. This portrayal, however, introduces an element of competition into Hagesias' relationship with his patron Hieron, the founder of Aitna. In response, the ode's subsequent mythic portions circumscribe Hagesias' status so as to mitigate (...)
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  • Um jovem poeta na Tessália: a Pítica X de Píndaro.Luísa de Nazaré Ferreira - 2011 - Humanitas 63:75-88.
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  • Elencuadre de la Pítica IV de Píndaro I.Carmen V. Verde Castro - 2009 - Synthesis (la Plata) 16:167-216.
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