Sebanyak 3176 item atau buku ditemukan

Homer for Beginners. Iliad, Book 1-3. With English notes, by ... T. K. Arnold

116: Campum ad vertamen, magme sub moenibus urbis, Dimensi Rutulique oiri
Teucrique parabant. —— 316. Khiipovs—wdhhov : E-lrahhov, cf. 23, 861, they
cast (lit. shook) lots. The lots, which probably were bits of wood marked in some ...

Max the Superdog

Max the Superdog was inspired by Melton's Jack Russel Terrior, Max. She only had Max for a short while, but he was an energetic, hyper, spastic ball of fur. She was in 4th grade at the time she had Max and her elementary school was involved with a program that published books for students for a small fee. This was to get children excited about writing. Melton decided to do a picture book about her dog, and at the age of 14, she extended the story and got Max the Superdog published as a chapter book for older elementary students and middle school students.

Melton decided to do a picture book about her dog, and at the age of 14, she extended the story and got Max the Superdog published as a chapter book for older elementary students and middle school students.

Kajian nilai budaya naskah kuno Sekartaji: Episode pertemuan dan penyadaran

Literary criticism of Dewi Sekartaji, Sundanese story.

ari hartina longgangga ieu disebut, leumpang di sisi muara, ka gunung tengen
cai. 02. Ret ka cai beh buaya, rek ka tonggoh aya, maung eukeur ngintip, nu
ngarah lalat jeung laut, kitu hartina longgangga, geus dikepung ku balai kenca ...

Reflections on Plato's Poetics

Essays from Beijing

Reflections on Plato's Poetics presents the reflections of leading scholars from China and the West on the form, nature and significance of Plato's engagement with poetry. The book does not adopt any monolithic point of view about Plato and poetry. Instead it openly explores Plato's attitudes to poetry, both comprehensively and within the intricate confines of particular dialogues. These reflections reveal a Plato who is deeply influenced by poetry; a Plato who writes, at least very often, from within a poetic paradigm; a Plato whose concerns about the influence and ambiguity of words force him to play with meaning and to provoke questions about meaning. Thus, many of the contributions reveal a concern about the relation of philosophy to poetry, how the two categories are different and whether (or in what way) one is superior to the other.A unique feature of Reflections on Plato's Poetics is the establishment of a dialogue between Chinese and Western scholars, whose different background assumptions about philosophy, poetry and Plato lead, we hope, to further reflections of genuinely novel and significant interest.

The book does not adopt any monolithic point of view about Plato and poetry. Instead it openly explores Plato's attitudes to poetry, both comprehensively and within the intricate confines of particular dialogues.