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Evans, Rhiannon; Midford, Sarah – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2022
We argue that students can understand an historical period by building on the foundations of their existing knowledge. Specifically, popular media can be used to develop students' historical literacies -- that is their ability to engage with past societies vastly different from their own. Our methodology takes inspiration from the ancient Romans'…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Popular Culture, History Instruction, Literacy
Klitenic Wear, Sarah – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
Based on a reading of Basil's "Ad Adulescentes" and the epistles, it is clear that Basil finds moral value in Homer and Hesiod. The trickier issue is to what extent Basil uses Homer and Hesiod in his homilies. It seems that Basil does not abandon his respect for the utility of Hellenic "paideia" for the Christian in his…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Moral Values, Education, Religion
Catherine Louise Kennedy – English Journal, 2015
If the average teenager was asked how he or she feels about reading ancient poetry, the response would probably be something akin to an eye roll or grunt of disgust. Young students generally have a visceral response to this sort of curriculum decision; it makes them shudder. One of the biggest challenges facing English teachers is to connect…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Poetry, Teaching Methods, Classical Literature
Omodeo, Pietro Daniel – Science & Education, 2014
This paper aims at showing the close ties between Renaissance literature and science as emerge from the use and the transformation, in a post-Copernican context, of the myth of Phaeton--according to Greek mythology: the boy who tried to conduct the chariot of the Sun and died in this attempt. G.B. Benedetti's analysis and criticism of…
Descriptors: Literature, Science History, Mythology, Poetry
Joan Lange; Patrick Connolly; Devin Lintzenich – English Journal, 2015
This article discusses how literacy and literature goals merged in a media project designed to encourage high school students to build new connections with the poetic elements of Shakespeare's plays "Romeo and Juliet" and "Julius Caesar." Using the free software Animoto movie maker, students were challenged to look closely at…
Descriptors: Poetry, Classical Literature, English Literature, Literature Appreciation
Koochacki, Fahime – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2016
The rich cultural connotations behind puns and the distinctive features of the puns' form, sound and meanings pose great challenges to the translator. Furthermore, given puns' non-negligible effects in Persian literary texts, it has been the aim of the present study to analyze and measure how puns in Sa'di's Ghazals have actually been treated in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Figurative Language, Translation, English (Second Language)
Eis, Andrea – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2013
This essay explores silent conversations with the past, but also navigates through the labyrinth of artistic process, with its manifold passages of research, chance occurrence and aesthetic experimentation. The double metaphors of silent conversations and labyrinths apply to the essay and the artwork within it, to the research and to the practice.…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Products, Research, Indo European Languages
Sansom, Dennis L. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2010
I argue in this paper that the ability of art to express a holistic experience of life challenges the abstractness and formulaic tendencies of some philosophical ethics. The paper examines the presentation of death in three poet-playwrights--Sophocles's "Oedipus Rex," Shakespeare's "Hamlet," and John Donne's "Meditation XVII." Sophocles's…
Descriptors: Ethics, Death, Poetry, Drama
Kleps, Daphne – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The paratactic and appositional nature of Homeric Greek syntax, as compared with Classical Greek syntax, is currently explained in two different ways. According to the archaism theory, originally proposed in the context of late 19th and early 20th century research into comparative-historical grammar, Homeric language preserves features of an early…
Descriptors: Syntax, Written Language, Greek, Poetry
Papastephanou, Marianna – Ethics and Education, 2008
The modern tendency to treat all Greek Golden Age textuality as apolitical and escapist has contributed to the ongoing neglect of the first Western educational text, Hesiod's "Works and days". Most commentators have missed the interplay of utopian and dystopian images in Hesiodic poetry for lack of the appropriate conceptual framework. Once the…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Poetry, Classical Literature, Justice

Kirk, G. S. – Greece and Rome, 1973
Inaugural lecture delivered at Bristol, England, March 1972. (RL)
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Epics, Greek Literature, Poetry

Putnam, Michael C. J. – Daedalus, 1969
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Linguistics, Literary Criticism, Poetry

Sommerstein, Alan H. – Greece and Rome, 1973
Revised version of a paper read at the Cambridge Philological Society, Cambridge, England, February 24, 1972. (RL)
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Comedy, Drama, Greek Literature
Nussbaum, G. B. – Didaskalos, 1971
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Language Rhythm, Latin, Poetry

Arts Education Policy Review, 2004
This article provides excerpts from "The Four Ages of Poetry" (1820), by Thomas Love Peacock; "The Defence of Poetry" (1821), by Percy Bysshe Shelley; and "On Milton" (1826), by Thomas Babington Macaulay. Although Shelley is the main focus, the essays are arranged chronologically. Brackets indicate editorial asides; original spelling and…
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Poetry, Art Education, Humanism