The New Hellenism: Oscar Wilde and ancient Greece
I examine Wilde’s Hellenism in terms of the specific texts, editions and institutions through which he encountered ancient Greece. The late-nineteenth-century professionalisation of classical scholarship and the rise of the new science of archaeology from the 1870s onwards endangered the status of a...
Main Author: | Ross, IA |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Sloan, J |
Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2008
|
Subjects: |
Similar Items
-
Audience reactions to Greek and Shakespearean tragedy
by: Budelmann, F, et al.
Published: (2013) -
A legend of wild beauty: Sophocles' Antigone
by: Vickers, M
Published: (2007) -
Penelope: a study in the manipulation of myth
by: Gilchrist, K
Published: (1997) -
The barbarian Sophist: Clement of Alexandria’s Stromateis and the Second Sophistic
by: Thomson, S
Published: (2014) -
Tragedy, rhetoric, and performance culture
by: Pelling, C
Published: (2005)