Ditemukan 806 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
Homer
New York : A Mentor Book , 1938
883 HOM
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Homer
London : Everyman's Library, 1992
881 HOM i
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Homer
Maryland : Penguin Books, 1950
883 H 313 i
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Roland, Charles P.
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1991
973.7 ROL a
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Miller, Madeline
"Yunani pada zaman para pahlawan. Patroclus, seorang pangeran muda yang kikuk, diasingkan ke istana Raja Peleus dan putranya yang sempurna, Achilles. Mereka tumbuh menjadi pemuda yang cakap dalam seni perang dan pengobatan, dan kedekatan mereka berkembang"
Jakarta: PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama, 2022
823 MIL s
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Bonnard, Andre
London: George Allen and Unwin, 1958
938 BON g
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
D`Angremond, T.H
Assen Van Gorcum 1943
839.33 Hoo az
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
D`Angremond, T.H
Assen Van Gorcum 1943
839.33 Hoo az
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Higbie, Carolyn
Oxford : Clarendon Press , 1990
883.01 HIG m
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
"This essay proposes a revised version of W. Schadewaldt’s (1900–1974) work. His work was done to demonstrate that the Iliad is built on one plan and that, therefore, the poem was created by a single poet. The usefulness of Schadewaldt’s work is being rediscovered among English-speaking classicists. Unfortunately, however, his explanation of the whole edifice of the Iliad is offered from a mistaken viewpoint, namely, that the “center of gravity” of whole narrative of the poem is Nestor’s suggestion to Patroclos that he go into battle wearing Achilleus’ armor. I argue that we can better understand the poem by examining the hero Achilleus’ contradictory attitudes toward κλεός (fame) as they are narrated in Book 9 of the Iliad. In 9.182–95, Achilleus sings an epic poem longing for traditional κλεός, yet immediately thereafter he denies the usual way to κλεός and declares that he will quit the battlefield. Through consideration of these contrasting attitudes we can better understand both the nature of the Iliad as epic narration and the nature of its hero, Achilleus."
300 HOZ 6:1 (2015)
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library