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Greek Metaphors of Light

Classical Quarterly 10 (3-4):181- (1960)

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  1. The Reunion Duo In Euripides' Helen1.C. W. Willink - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (1):45-69.
    So begins one of the most engaging, and variously controversial, musical scenes in Euripides. The Messenger's narrative of the Phantom Helen's disappearance has proved to Menelaus that the Helen standing before him is the real Helen, altogether innocent of elopement to Troy, from whom he has been sundered for seventeen laborious years. The ensuing embrace is developed in a duet which is followed without a break by the so-called ‘Interrogation’, the two together constituting the so-called ‘Recognition Duo’.
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  • In the domain of the image.Michael A. Peters & E. Jayne White - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (7):677-682.
    In our world we sleep and eat the image and pray to it and wear it too.– Don DeLillo, (2016) Mao II, p.27, Pan Macmillan.Some three years ago we envisioned a project concerning the shift from text...
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  • Two thirteenth-century theories of light: Robert Grosseteste and St. Bonaventure.Lucia Miccoli - 2001 - Semiotica 2001 (136).
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  • Dying is Hard to Describe: Metonymies and Metaphors of Death in the Iliad.Fabian Horn - 2018 - Classical Quarterly 68 (2):359-383.
    Homer'sIliadis an epic poem full of war and battles, but scholars have noted that ‘[t]he Homeric poems are interested in death far more than they are in fighting’. Even though long passages of the poem, particularly the so-called ‘battle books’ (Il.Books 5–8, 11–17, 20–2), consist of little other than fighting, individual battles are often very short with hardly ever a longer exchange of blows. Usually, one strike is all it takes for the superior warrior to dispatch his opponent, and death (...)
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  • The fires of the Oresteia.Timothy Nolan Gantz - 1977 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 97:28-38.