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Tag Archives: Aeschylus
Herodotus’ Histories
My previous experience of Herodotus had been, as for many classicists, that of reading isolated episodes, either as set texts for teaching Greek GCSE, or as passages for unseen translation. I’d also read some of his stories in secondary literature, … Continue reading
Posted in History, Translation
Tagged Aeschylus, Antigone, Greek history, Herodotus, Persians, Thucydides
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“Wagner and Aeschylus: the Ring and the Oresteia” by Michael Ewans
[just the first two chapters: I need to listen to the Ring itself before reading the others] Chapter 1: Wagner and Aeschylus This is a general introduction to them both, especially, as the book’s intended audience is more musicological than … Continue reading