Rejoignez-nous pour un voyage dans le monde des livres!
Ajouter ce livre à l'électronique
Grey
Ecrivez un nouveau commentaire Default profile 50px
Grey
Abonnez-vous pour lire le livre complet ou lisez les premières pages gratuitement!
All characters reduced
The Ajax of Sophocles - cover

The Ajax of Sophocles

Sophocles

Traducteur R. C. Trevelyan

Maison d'édition: DigiCat

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Synopsis

The "Ajax of Sophocles" is a profound exploration of heroism, shame, and the complexities of human emotion set against the backdrop of the Trojan War. This classic Greek tragedy is distinguished by its powerful use of dramatic irony and nuanced character development, showcasing Ajax's descent into madness after being dishonored in battle. Sophocles employs a stark yet lyrical style that conveys the internal struggles of his characters, reflecting the moral ambiguities and societal expectations of ancient Athens. The play intricately weaves themes of glory, honor, and the personal cost of war, positioning Ajax as a tragic hero caught between pride and desperation. Sophocles, one of the three ancient Greek tragedians whose works have survived, was deeply influenced by the socio-political landscape of his time. Having experienced the complexities of Athenian politics and warfare, Sophocles imbued his plays with a keen understanding of human psychology and ethical dilemmas. His portrayal of Ajax not only illuminates the disintegration of a once-great warrior but also critiques the notion of heroism in a society that often values honor above humanity. I highly recommend "The Ajax of Sophocles" to readers interested in classical literature and the intricacies of human emotion. This play serves as a timeless reflection on the struggles of identity and the harsh realities of life, making it a pertinent read for anyone examining the vulnerabilities of the human spirit amidst the trials of existence.
Disponible depuis: 10/08/2022.
Longueur d'impression: 29 pages.

D'autres livres qui pourraient vous intéresser

  • Ima and Coli Are the Tree That Was Never a Seed - cover

    Ima and Coli Are the Tree That...

    Alejandro Pérez-Cortés

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The new winner of the Paz Prize for Poetry, granted by the National Poetry Series, is the author’s impressionistic homage to his hometown of Colima, Mexico.“In this remarkable bilingual debut . . . Pérez-Cortés cracks open the name of his hometown, Colima, to generate a vast mythology . . . The side-by-side presentation of the original Spanish and its English translation adds another layer to this engrossing volume.” —BooklistA Poets & Writers Page One SelectionIma and Coli Are the Tree That Was Never a Seed is Alejandro Pérez-Cortés’s personal genesis of Colima, Mexico, published here in both English and Spanish. The tree is an element/character in the book that appears and disappears throughout. Some poems are set in an ancient pre-Hispanic Colima; others reflect the reality of a modern-day Colima, sadly stigmatized and eroded by violence perpetrated by the narcos.In his introduction, preeminent Cuban poet José Kozer praises Pérez-Cortés: “Ima and Coli Are the Tree That Was Never a Seed comprises a voice that I consider poetic and that should be cared for and listened to with true interest. A voice that encompasses all, one that seeks to integrate, remake, and modify normative language when necessary, and to distort language that allows a better perception of the present and of everything that is historically behind a contemporary poet.”The Paz Prize for Poetry is presented by the National Poetry Series and Miami Book Fair at Miami Dade College and is awarded biennially. Named in the spirit of the late Nobel Prize–winning poet Octavio Paz, it honors a previously unpublished book of poetry written originally in Spanish by an American resident.
    Voir livre
  • Kevin Goes to Japan 3 - Stories for Japanese Learners JLPT N5 to N3 - cover

    Kevin Goes to Japan 3 - Stories...

    Miwako Kiritani

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Thank you for purchasing my book, "Kevin Goes to Japan 3: Stories for Japanese Learners, JLPT N5 to N1." Some of them would realize that the range of the level is more comprehensive than before. Because this book is just before the last book, I wanted to focus on telling the story. Therefore, some Japanese sentences would be complicated for early learners. However, reading many books is good practice to understand the language, and you need to have the skill to guess unknown words by seeing the context. The word lists are more than Kevin 2, showing many vocabularies, and I keep writing topics from each chapter. 
    But 15 JLPT sample questions come with each chapter, a total of 180 questions for N5 to N3. I believe that advanced learners need to read books that understand more natural Japanese. Instead of sample questions, please try to use expressions you can find a list, "Miscellaneous (Idioms, expressions, proverbs, etc.)." 
    Tomoko teaches Kevin Kanji radical that Japanese language questions include in this book in this story. JLPT wouldn't ask radical, but if you know the basic rules, it helps to give extra knowledge about this language and its origins. 
    In the story, Kevin wants Yukio to fall in love with Tomoko, and you can see how his love strategy works. However, the day Kevin's working holiday visa expires is coming, and he and Yumiko's relationship will be swirled. 
    I hope you enjoy this story as a bilingual novel as well. 
    Content 
    1. I'll Do Everything I Can for Yukio 
    2. How to Offer Incense at the Buddhist Altar 
    3. The Origin of Kanji 
    4. Are the British Really Gentlemen? 
    5. The Secret of the Smile 
    6. White Day 
    7. The Day After White Day 
    8. I Want to be Your Set Meal 
    9. More Than Friends, Less Than Lovers? 
    10. Definition of an Auntie 
    11. Wavering Female Heart 
    12. The Spirit of Women
    Voir livre
  • Deceptive Calm - cover

    Deceptive Calm

    Patricia Skipper

    • 0
    • 4
    • 0
    Against the turbulent backdrop of declared martial law in South Carolina, a stunning light-skinned beauty, Vanessa, lives in a Catholic orphanage for Blacks. After a series of racial traumas, Vanessa obtains the birth certificate of a deceased white baby and uses this document to assume the child's identity. She moves to California and enrolls at UC Berkeley under her newly acquired name. 
    Vanessa marries into one of California's wealthiest families. Her charmed life abruptly ends eighteen months after the birth of her first child who is diagnosed with sickle cell trait. Discovering that the woman he married is Black, as is his toddler son, Vanessa's ruthless husband plots his revenge but they both survive. The police investigation that follows seems pretty clear-cut until a curious, young detective uncovers some clues to her private life where nothing is as it appears. The aftermath of the discovery brings down a pillar of San Francisco society.
    Voir livre
  • The Terrible Prophecy - cover

    The Terrible Prophecy

    Alexender Bestuzhev-Marlinsky

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Best known for his poetry and historic novels in the style of Sir Walter Scott, Alexender Bestuzhev-Marlinsky takes a turn down a different path with A Terrible Prophecy and delivers classic spooky tale on the dangers of having one's wishes fulfilled to the letter.
    Voir livre
  • Deed - cover

    Deed

    torrin a. greathouse

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    DEED, the follow-up to torrin a. greathouse's 2022 Kate Tufts Discovery Award winning debut, Wound from the Mouth of a Wound, is a formally and lyrically innovative exploration of queer sex and desire, and what it can cost. Sprawling across art, eros, survival, myth, etymology, and musical touchstones from Bruce Springsteen to Against Me!, this new book both subverts and pays homage to the poetic canon, examining an artistic lineage that doesn't always love trans or disabled people back. Written in a broad range of received and invented forms—from caudate sonnets and the sestina, to acrostics and the burning haibun—DEED indicts violent systems of carceral, medical, and legal power which disrupt queer and disabled love and solidarity, as well as the potentially vicarious manner in which audiences consume art. This collection is a poetic triptych centered on the question of how, in spite of all these complications, to write an honest poem about desire. At its core, DEED is a reminder of how tenderness can be made a shield, a weapon, or a kind of faith, depending on the mouth that holds it.[sample text]from EtymythologyI'm clocked by etymology,by the way even stilettos take their namefrom a knife. The way a knife, well-honed,can strip anything to the bone. Bear with me, sometimes even the myths growblurry in the distance. The root of Artemis, goddess of the hunt, is still unknown, but likely comes from artamos—butcher. Let's call this a kind of etymythology,post hoc history; let's call Artemis the root. For her wild heart. Her failedfemininity. Goddess of gender-fuckedgirls. Crooked prayer. The word worship is shaped from two shards—meaning worth & its giving. A mouth gives faith shape like clay. I mean that to pray is to god a God. To be butch & butcher the myth of a son, was to makea goddess of myself.
    Voir livre
  • Around the World in 80 Poems - A global tour of classic poetry - cover

    Around the World in 80 Poems - A...

    Robert Louis Stevenson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In the Victorian age that great adventurer Phileas Fogg attempted to traverse the globe in a mere 80 days using only the existing transport infrastructure and his own nous.    
     
    Today the globe can be spanned much quicker and in more comfortable fashion but alas without much of the intrigues, stories and landscape that accompanied Mr Fogg and made the trip so exciting. 
     
    In this volume we have an answer: Let’s travel the globe with the words and verse of 80 esteemed and voluble poets.  Let’s explore places, peoples, philosophical musings on our world and all manner of things that Mr Fogg had no access to.  With the words of classic poets such as John Keats, Rabindranath Tagore, Du Fu and Edna St Vincent Millay as your companions it’s one heck of a journey. 
     
    1 - Around the World in 80 Poems - An Introduction 
    2 - Travel by Edna St Vincent Millay 
    3 - Travel by Robert Louis Stevenson 
    4 - A Ballad of London by Richard Le Gallienne 
    5 - The World State by G K Chesterton 
    6 - The Drunken Boat by Arthur Rimbaud 
    7 - In the Train and at Versailles by Dante Gabriel Rossetti 
    8 - Train Ride by Federico Garcia Lorca 
    9 - I Go on Dreaming of Paths by Antonio Machado 
    10 - Sonnet I by Fernando Pessoa 
    11 - Sonnet on Approaching Italy by Oscar Wilde 
    12 - To Italy by Radclyffe Hall 
    13 - Sicily December 1908 by Henry Van Dyke 
    14 - Sonnet to Lake Leman by Lord Byron 
    15 - Pathways by Rainer Maria Rilke 
    16 - In the Black Forest by Amy Levy 
    17 - Calm at Sea by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 
    18 - Sonnet to Ocean by Thomas Hood 
    19 - In Amsterdam by Eugene Field 
    20 - Sonnet at Ostend July 22nd 1787 by William Lisle Bowles 
    21 - Belgium by Edith Wharton 
    22 - Forced March by Miklos Radnoti 
    23 - Autumn Evening in Serbia by Francis Ledwidge 
    24 - The Cretan Dance by Sappho 
    25 - The Isles of Greece by Byron 
    26 - Sailing to Byzantium by W B Yeats 
    27 - Constantinople by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu 
    28 - Beirut Wedding Poem by Tim Graham 
    29 - The Life of Love - Spring by Khalil Gibran 
    30 - Gates of Damascus by James Elroy Flecker 
    31 - Walk to Caesarea by Hannah Senesh 
    32 - The City of Baghdad by Sultan Bahu 
    33 - Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley 
    34 - To the Nile by Keats 
    35 - Ode to Ethiopia by Paul Laurence Dunbar 
    36 - My Africa by Gladys May Casely Hayford 
    37 - Africa by Lewis Alexander 
    38 - Poem by Sarah of Yemen 
    39 - Sleepless I Kept the Night Vigil by Khansa 
    40 - The Golden Journey to Samarkand by James Elroy Flecker 
    41 - A World with No Boundaries by Jalaluddin Rumi 
    42 - All Pervading Consciousness by Farid ud-Din Attar 
    43 - The Cloud on the Mountain by Alama Iqbal 
    44 - In the Bazaars of Hyderabad by Sarojini Naidu 
    45 - To the City of Bombay by Rudyard Kipling 
    46 - An Old Tibetan Rug by Else Lasker Schuler 
    47 - Dawn by Du Fu 
    48 - Chiang Chin Chiu by Li Po 
    49 - In Praise of May by Akiko Yosano 
    50 - Having Slept The Cat Gets Up by Kobayashi Issa 
    51 - The Owl and the Pussycat by Edward Lear 
    52 - The Loji Expedition by Tom Hood 
    53 - The Ocean by Nathaniel Hawthorne 
    54 - A Song for January the 26th 1824 by Charles Tompson 
    55 - Brother, You'll Take My Hand by Henry Lawson 
    56 - Tiare Tahiti by Rupert Brooke 
    57 - A Song of the Panama Canal by Damon Runyon 
    58 - Tezcotzinco by Alan Seeger 
    59 - Down By The Carib Sea by James Weldon Johnson 
    60 - North and South by Claude McKay 
    61 - Bermudas by Andrew Marvell 
    62 - Song of the Open Road by Walt Whitman 
    63 - New York at Night by Amy Lowell 
    64 - The New Colossus by Emma Lazarus 
    65 - Away to Canada by Joshua McCarter Simpson 
    66 - The Railway Station by Archibald Lampman 
    67 - Past One O'Clock by Vladimir Mayakovsky 
    68 - A Dish of Peaches in Russia by Wallace Stevens 
    69 - Aurora Borealis by Herman Melville 
    70 - Iceland First Seen by William Morris 
    71 - My Artificial Flowers by Edith Sodergran 
    72 - The Wayfarer by Patrick Pearse 
    73 - The Lake Isle of Inisfree by W B Yeats 
    74 - Beauti
    Voir livre