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"L'enfant qui rêve de Troie. Le commerçant international passionné par les héros homériques. L'archéologogue qui découbre le site de la ville mythique et le trésor de Priam. L'autodidacte accusé d'être un faussaire. Le polyglotte qu iparle au moins treize langues. A toutes ces facettes de Heinrich schliemann, ce livre ajoute celle de l'auteur de qutre autobiographies différentes, qui se construisent à partir d'emprunts à d'autres narrateurs - Homère, des articles de journaux, des légendes locales, les lettres de membres de sa famille et de correspondants inconnus. Schliemann raconte sa vie en faisant l'impasse sur sa formation, qui transforma un hommes d'affaires de plus de 40 ans en héros de la science, à une époque où l'archéologie ne possédait pas encore de reconnaissance disciplinaire. Le caractère exemplaire acquis par ces autobiographies interroge notre attachement à certaines formes du récit, mettant finalement en évidence le sens qui se construit dasn les interstices de ce qui est dit et occulté."
Archaeologists --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Civilization, Mycenaean. --- Schliemann, Heinrich, --- Troy (Extinct city) --- Greece --- Civilization --- Antiquités grecques --- Troie (ville ancienne) --- Trésor de Priam. --- Schliemann, Heinrich --- Biography --- Antiquités grecques. --- Trésor de Priam. --- Archaeologists - Germany - Biography. --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Turkey - Troy (Extinct city) --- Schliemann, Heinrich, - 1822-1890. --- Greece - Civilization - To 146 B.C.
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This book presents a rigorous philological examination of every instance where Hektor enters the Iliad, analysing each entrance's narrative context and style. In so doing, the author challenges and destabilises previous popular and scholarly assumptions about Hektor, and about the Iliad as a whole.
Charakterisierung. --- Erzähltechnik. --- Hector (Legendary character) in literature. --- Hektor. --- Homer. --- Homerus, --- Iliad (Homer). --- Homer --- Classics --- Achilles --- Agamemnon --- Ajax the Great --- Diomedes --- Hector --- Iliad --- Paris --- Priam --- Sarpedon --- Zeus --- In literature. --- Hector, --- Hektor --- Hektoras --- Εκτωρ --- Εκτορας --- Hector (Legendary character)--in literature.
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Dossier : Quel rapport l’image entretient-elle avec le support qui la véhicule ? Les vases attiques fournissent une quantité de représentations souvent traitées comme si elles étaient plates et immatérielles. Ce dossier questionne cette matérialité selon deux axes : comment l’image s’adapte-t-elle aux surfaces rondes, sphériques, circulaires du vase ? Varia : Paradigmes masculins (le vieux Priam, le héros euripidéen, sophistes platoniciens, Hermès au gymnase, Ésope). Archéologie d'un mythe (les Arimaspes). Étiologie. Conférence Gernet : Aube de la cité, aube des images ?
Art --- History & Archaeology --- Greek ceramics --- iconography --- judgment of Paris --- symposion --- phiale --- Priam --- Aesop Romance --- paideia --- sophists --- trade networks --- onomastics --- images --- iconographie --- iconographie des vases --- céramique grecque --- composition de l’image --- jugement de Pâris --- Roman d’Ésope --- sophistes --- étiologie --- réseaux de commerce --- Mer Noire --- onomastique
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This book brings together twenty-three distinctive and influential essays on ancient moral philosophy--including several published here for the first time--by the distinguished philosopher and classical scholar John Cooper. The volume gives a systematic account of many of the most important issues and texts in ancient moral psychology and ethical theory, providing a unified and illuminating way of reflecting on the fields as they developed from Socrates and Plato through Aristotle to Epicurus and the Stoic philosophers Chrysippus and Posidonius, and beyond. For the ancient philosophers, Cooper shows here, morality was "good character" and what that entailed: good judgment, sensitivity, openness, reflectiveness, and a secure and correct sense of who one was and how one stood in relation to others and the surrounding world. Ethical theory was about the best way to be rather than any principles for what to do in particular circumstances or in relation to recurrent temptations. Moral psychology was the study of the psychological conditions required for good character--the sorts of desires, the attitudes to self and others, the states of mind and feeling, the kinds of knowledge and insight. Together these papers illustrate brilliantly how, by studying the arguments of the Greek philosophers in their diverse theories about the best human life and its psychological underpinnings, we can expand our own moral understanding and imagination and enrich our own moral thought. The collection will be crucial reading for anyone interested in classical philosophy and what it can contribute to reflection on contemporary questions about ethics and human life.
Philosophical anthropology --- General ethics --- Antiquity --- Ethics, Ancient. --- Morale ancienne --- Plato --- Aristotle --- Ethics. --- 1 <38> --- 17 --- Ethics, Ancient --- Ancient ethics --- Griekse filosofie --- Filosofische ethiek --- -Aristoteles --- Aflāṭūn --- Aplaton --- Bolatu --- Platon, --- Platonas --- Platone --- Po-la-tʻu --- Pʻŭllatʻo --- Pʻŭllatʻon --- Pʻuratʻon --- Πλάτων --- אפלטון --- פלאטא --- פלאטאן --- פלאטו --- أفلاطون --- 柏拉圖 --- 플라톤 --- Ethics --- 17 Filosofische ethiek --- 1 <38> Griekse filosofie --- Aristoteles --- Aristote --- Aristotile --- Platon --- Platoon --- Arisṭāṭṭil --- Aristo, --- Aristotel --- Aristotele --- Aristóteles, --- Aristòtil --- Arisṭū --- Arisṭūṭālīs --- Arisutoteresu --- Arystoteles --- Ya-li-shih-to-te --- Ya-li-ssu-to-te --- Yalishiduode --- Yalisiduode --- Ἀριστοτέλης --- Αριστοτέλης --- Аристотел --- ארסטו --- אריםטו --- אריסטו --- אריסטוטלס --- אריסטוטלוס --- אריסטוטליס --- أرسطاطاليس --- أرسططاليس --- أرسطو --- أرسطوطالس --- أرسطوطاليس --- ابن رشد --- اريسطو --- Pseudo Aristotele --- Pseudo-Aristotle --- Платон --- プラトン --- アリストテレス --- 17 Moral philosophy. Ethics. Practical philosophy --- Moral philosophy. Ethics. Practical philosophy --- Antiochus. --- Athenaeus. --- Bruns, Ivo. --- Burkert, W. --- Chrysippus. --- Cicero. --- Diotima. --- Epictetus. --- Isocrates. --- Kelsey, Sean. --- Lucretius. --- Marcus Aurelius. --- Mitsis, Phillip. --- Olympiodorus. --- Penner, T. --- Plotinus. --- Posidonius. --- Priam. --- Strauss, L. --- akrasia. --- altruism. --- animals. --- co-instantiation. --- courage. --- death. --- dialectic. --- educators. --- empiricism. --- ethics. --- eudaimonism. --- flourishing. --- goods, external. --- hedonism. --- imagination. --- incontinence. --- interentailment of virtues. --- justice. --- knowledge. --- language. --- moral psychology. --- motivations, human. --- music. --- nature. --- nonrational desires. --- objectivity. --- oratory. --- perfection. --- phantasiai. --- piety. --- rhetoric. --- self-awareness. --- suicide.
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