1-20 of 30
Keywords: Telemachus
Sort by
Chapter
Published: 01 September 2020
... Rancière Jacques silence sound voice Louis XIV pedagogy Telemachus irony opera politics Ross Kristin tradition Christianity Faydit Pierre Valentin religion Enlightenment musical pleasure ethical regime of art muteness and mute speech stultification equality speech regimes of art...
Chapter
Published: 19 July 2022
...While Odysseus and Bloom are alienated from their past selves, Telemachus and Stephen Dedalus appear trapped by the past and unable to move on. Both are caught between mothers who hold them back and fathers they cannot aspire to match, further complicated for Stephen by the role that Joyce sets...
Chapter
Published: 20 September 2022
..., and Telemachus fall headlong, threatening a return to strife and cycles of vengeance. 97 As this strife plays out in the last bit of the Odyssey, Zeus advises Athena to erase the memories of the mnēstērophonia by means of eklēsis (“forgetting...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2021
... about his father, but the difference between Homer’s Telemachus and Mendelsohn is that Mendelsohn’s quest is undertaken largely in his father’s presence. In January 2011, 81-year-old Jay Mendelsohn, a retired mathematician, enrolled in his son’s undergraduate seminar on the Odyssey...
Book
Published online: 22 April 2021
Published in print: 01 April 2021
... Times, Britain is Drowning Itself in Nostalgia , 23 March 2019. 17 © Bill Bragg. 0.5 Ulysses and Telemachus. Wood engraving by Charles Baude, nineteenth century. 28 Granger/Bridgeman Images. 0.6 Republican fighters flee to France, 1939. 29 © SZ Photo/Scherl/Bridgeman Images. 1.1 When You Come Home...
Chapter
Published: 30 January 2020
...Fénelon. Ryan Patrick Hanley, Oxford University Press (2020) © Oxford University Press. DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190079581.001.0001 Telemachus, first published in 1699, was the centerpiece of Fénelon’s education for Burgundy. Its initial publication is said to be owed to the theft...
Chapter
Published: 27 November 2018
...In the Odyssey the educational theme (whose prominence was already recognized in antiquity) takes a distinctive turn, probably because Odysseus’ son Telemachus has grown up without a father’s guidance and advice. The chapter begins by considering the childhood and youth of Odysseus...
Chapter
Published: 20 March 1997
... was the faithful servant and advisor to Ulysses, king of Ithaca. Embarking for the Trojan war, Ulysses left his wife, Penelope, and his son, Telemachus, under Mentor’s care. relationships interpersonal attributed effectiveness Telemachus This content is only available as a PDF. ...
Chapter
Published: 20 October 2016
...This paper examines three aspects of the treatment of the relationship of love to virtue in François Fénelon’s Telemachus. As one of the great French intellectual figures of the early eighteenth century, Fenelon was at first admired but then banished from the royal court. This was largely because...
Chapter
Published: 13 November 1997
...0 13 11 1997 In the first four books of the Odyssey two stories probably make a special impression on the casual reader ‘s mind. The first is Telemachus ‘ fight for justice with the suitors. In front of the assembled people and gods, he complains about the wicked behaviour...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2021
... García Portillo Michael Bryson Bill The Lost Continent Great Railway Journeys BBC Mendelsohn Daniel Portillo Luis Gabriel Salamanca Spain Telemachus figures Bragge William Columbus Christopher Copernicus Generación del 27 Lope de Vega Luis de León Fray Martyr d’Anghiera Peter Vitoria...
Chapter
Published: 15 December 2020
...This chapter offers a few different ways of understanding Telemachus's mental and emotional states and the transformation he undergoes as he moves from Ithaca through Pylos to Sparta. It compares this marginalized state to the modern theory of Learned Helplessness and argues...
Chapter
Published: 25 July 1991
...0 25 07 1991 At dawn, after they had sent out the drovers with their pigs, Odysseus was helping the honest swineherd light the fire within their hut and prepare breakfast, when suddenly the restless noisy dogs hushed their baying to fawn about the approaching Telemachus. Drovers Swineherd...
Chapter
Published: 25 July 1991
...0 25 07 1991 At Dawn saw Telemachus, the son Odysseus loved, binding on his rich sandals. He picked up the heavy spear that so well fitted his grasp and turned his face town wards, saying to the swineherd, “I am for home, father, to show myself to my mother, for I think she will not stop her...
Chapter
Published: 06 September 2001
...0 06 09 2001 A passage in The Odyssey faithfully captures the peculiar quality of the psychoactive effect of opiates. The scene is the palace of Menelaus, king of Sparta. Telemachus, depressed and miserable after his long and vain search for his father Odysseus, is being...
Chapter
Published: 21 April 1994
... thus conforms with Odyssey Books 13–24, which pertain entirely to Achaea. Books 13 and 14 take place in Ithaca, Book 15 moves to Sparta in order to bring Telemachus home via Pylos, and from the end of Book 15 to the end of the epic, the action occurs entirely in Ithaca. exceptions...
Chapter
Published: 06 May 2020
...In Chapter 6 I explore two examples of characters in Emile reading other books as part of my own examination of how Rousseau educates his own reader: Emile’s reading of Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and the role of reading of Fénelon’s Adventures of Telemachus within the story of Emile and Sophie. After...
Chapter
Published: 29 September 2021
... wine Circe Cyprus Egypt Helen Menelaus Odysseus Phoenicia Polybus Sparta Spartan Telemachus Thebes in Egypt Trojan War Zeus Homer Odyssey pharmakon etiology and etiological explanation supplicatory incantation Aeschylus Aphrodite Autolykos Calabria Crete Fury Furies Jason Medea...
Chapter
Published: 28 March 2019
... and the Odyssey. Achilles Catalogue of Ships Danaans Iliad Muses narratology Olympus perspective of the poet wrath of Achilles ancient scholarship cattle of the Sun Demodocus fame Odyssey performance Phaeacians Phemius Sun cattle of Telemachus Troy Homer Longinus revenge Achaeans...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2021
... the mythical and the mundane. As a rewriting of Homer, it is manifestly a minor work, but it is nonetheless an affecting and thought-provoking piece, unsettling in its portrayal of Ithaca as an elusive and illusory destination, the figment of a restive grief. Told from the perspective of Telemachus...