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  1.  10
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 1, Greek Literature.P. E. Easterling &Bernard M. W. Knox (eds.) -1985 - Cambridge University Press.
    This series provides individual textbooks on early Greek poetry, on Greek drama, on philosophy, history and oratory, and on the literature of the Hellenistic period and of the Empire. A chapter on books and readers in the Greek world concludes Part 4. Each part has its own appendix of authors and works, a list of works cited, and an index.
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  2.  12
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 1, Greek Literature, Part 1, Early Greek Poetry.P. E. Easterling &Bernard M. W. Knox (eds.) -1989 - Cambridge University Press.
    The period from the eighth to the fifth centuries B.C. was one of extraordinary creativity in the Greek-speaking world. Poetry was a public and popular medium, and its production was closely related to developments in contemporary society. At the time when the city states were acquiring their distinctive institutions epic found the greatest of all its exponents in Homer, and lyric poetry for both solo and choral performance became a genre which attracted poets of the first rank, writers of the (...) quality of Sappho, Alcaeus and Pindar, whose influence on later literature was to be profound. This volume covers the epic tradition, the didactic poems of Hesiod and his imitators, and the wide-ranging work of the iambic, elegiac and lyric poets of what is loosely called the archaic age. The contributors make use of recent papyrus finds to fill out the picture of a cosmopolitan and highly sophisticated literary culture which had not yet found its intellectual centre in Athens. (shrink)
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  3.  9
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 1, Greek Literature, Part 2, Greek Drama.P. E. Easterling &Bernard M. W. Knox (eds.) -1989 - Cambridge University Press.
    This series provides individual textbooks on early Greek poetry, on Greek drama, on philosophy, history and oratory, and on the literature of the Hellenistic period and of the Empire. A chapter on books and readers in the Greek world concludes Part IV. Each part has its own appendix of authors and works, a list of works cited, and an index.
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  4.  7
    The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 1, Greek Literature, Part 3, Philosophy, History and Oratory.P. E. Easterling &Bernard M. W. Knox (eds.) -1989 - Cambridge University Press.
    This volume ranges in time over a very long period and covers the Greeks' most original contributions to intellectual history. It begins and ends with philosophy, but it also includes major sections on historiography and oratory. Although each of these areas had functions which in the modern world would not be considered 'Literary', the ancients made a less sharp distinction between intellectual and artistic production, and the authors included in this volume are some of Europe's most powerful stylists: Plato, Herodotus, (...) Thucydides and Demosthenes. (shrink)
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  5.  71
    Work and Justice in Archaic Greece.Bernard M. W. Knox -1982 -Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 57 (3):317-331.
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