Showing 101 - 120 results of 194 for search '"Classical Antiquity"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
  1. 101

    Penia in Entenhausen: Ökonomische Theorie, soziale Utopie und politische Ideologie bei Aristophanes und Carl Barks by Hans Kopp

    Published 2019-05-01
    “…Carl Barks, the most influential chronicler of the Duckburg universe and the creator of such memorable characters as Scrooge McDuck, only very rarely made references to classical antiquity in his comic stories. Nevertheless, there is a striking resemblance between ideas propounded in "Plutos," Aristophanes’ last extant comedy of 388 B.C., and “A Financial Fable,” a story by Barks published in 1951. …”
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  2. 102

    EVOLUTION OF THE IMAGE OF THE SHIP IN CLASSICAL LITERATURE (THE EXAMPLE OF “ARGONAUTICA” BY APOLLONIUS OF RHODES AND “ODYSSEY” BY HOMER) by I. S. Makarova

    Published 2014-02-01
    “…The analysis of the classical antiquity Ship by the example of classical poems by Apollonius of Rhodes and Homer makes it possible to get a clearer picture of the world Ship’s most popular artistic hypostasis – the Flying Dutchman.…”
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  3. 103

    Le divorce dans l’Antiquité classique : perspective comparatiste by Jean-Baptiste Bonnard, Camille Noûs

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…Divorce existed in Classical Antiquity (Greek and Roman worlds, 5th century BCE – 2nd century CE), but it differed significantly from the modern homonymous reality in several features which have more to do with the distinctly patriarchal structures of these ancient societies. …”
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  4. 104

    Arma sumpserit (Lucan. 7, 259-260). Maradona, Malvinas and the art of safe criticism by GABRIELA ANDREA MARRON

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…<p class="western" align="justify"><span><span style="color: #353637;"><span><span style="font-family: 'Liberation Sans', serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><span><span><span><span>The purpose of this research article is to study the discurse strategies used by Frederick Ahl in the academic paper entitled “The hand of God: Diego Maradona and the divine nature of cheating in Classical Antiquity”, establishing their convergences with certain poetic resources and rhetorical devices described by him in his researches on classical literature. …”
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  5. 105

    Poltergeist: quem tem medo de φαντάσµατα? (Phleg. Mir. 1-3 em consideração) by Reina Marisol Troca Pereira

    Published 2016-09-01
    “…Palabras clave: muerte; resurrección; fantasma; aparición; terror; miedo Abstract This paper contains summarized observations regarding mythology as a recurring presence in Classical Antiquity. Besides the accumulation of realities and events never heard of, paradoxography also presents episodes of phantasmagoric apparitions. …”
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  6. 106

    L’architecture en pisé dans le canton de Boën (Loire) by Caroline Guibaud

    Published 2012-05-01
    “…The oldest surviving examples date from the thirteenth century, although pisé is known to have been used in classical antiquity. The pisé buildings which can be dated show how the use of the material evolved from the sixteenth century to the eighteenth and how this use achieved certain stability around the time of the architect François Cointereaux, writing in 1790. …”
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  7. 107

    Self news: the fiction that mirrors you by Ana Paula Grillo El-Jaick

    Published 2020-07-01
    “…Finally, there is the defense of the thesis that if there is any embryo of “The Post-Truth Era" in classical antiquity, in contemporary times there is a cynicism and an ultra-narcissism that redefine this linguistic idea. …”
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  8. 108

    Tidigare än, men ändå samtida by Dimitrios Iordanoglou, Mats Persson

    Published 2013-01-01
    “…The first part presents the discussions of the last decades on the guiding principles of the writing of history in Classical antiquity. It focuses particularly on the view that ancient historiography has more in common with Classical literature and rhetoric than with history, as we understand it today. …”
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  9. 109

    New Representations of the Myth of Pelops and Hippodamia in Roman Mosaic Art by Miguel Ángel VALERO TÉVAR

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…The discovery of the mosaic at Noheda, featuring, for the first time, the entire narrative sequence of the myth, coupled with the discovery of a possible new specimen, in which Pothos is portrayed as a main character for the first time, not only makes it possible to reconstrue hitherto misinterpreted ancient tapestries, but also furthers understanding of the legend’s iconography in Classical Antiquity.…”
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  10. 110

    The Church of Surb Prkich in Ani (1035). Part 1: History and Historiography – Architectural Plan – Excavations of 2012 and Starting of Conservation by Kazaryan, Armen, Özkaya, İsmail Yavuz, Pontioğlu, Alin

    Published 2016-11-01
    “…Dated to 1035, this polyconch church stands as a beautiful example of the metropolitan school, which was especially dedicated to interpreting the architectural forms and principles of Classical antiquity. The church has survived both medieval reconstructions and a subsequent restoration in 1912, as well as remained extant within the ruins of Ani despite its western half preserved in poor condition. …”
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  11. 111
  12. 112

    Estructuras comparativas intensivas en la Edad Media: el adjetivo checo ‘černý’ y el nórdico antiguo ‘svartr’ en comparación con el adjetivo español ‘negro’ by Xavier Blanco, Rafael García Pérez, Enrique Gutiérrez Rubio

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…Numerous convergences are observed, largely due to the existence of deep common cultural bases, such as Christianity and the literary tradition of classical antiquity, but also numerous divergences and even singularities of each of the languages considered.…”
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  13. 113

    O estresse agudo de Orestes em Eurípides by Luciano Heidrich Bisol

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…The aim of this article is to verify the metonymic relationships between the concept of mania in classical antiquity and the concept of post-traumatic stress in contemporary psychology.…”
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  14. 114

    Les effets néfastes de la kubeia. Mise en jeu du prestige et de l’image sociale en Grèce classique by Marco Vespa

    Published 2020-10-01
    “…In several texts from classical antiquity, the invention of dice and board games is associated with attempts to put an end to crisis in the political community, as the stories about Palamedes seem to show. …”
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  15. 115

    Renaissance square header with pseudo-hemispherical cross vault in Santiago parish church in Orihuela (Alicante) by Antonio Luis López González

    Published 2015-06-01
    “…This involves the fusion of the Classical antiquity with the Hispano-Muslim tradition. By reference thereto, will be discussed briefly the Benavides Chapel in Baeza (Jaén), a building of Andrés Vandelvira. …”
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  16. 116

    «Huego de amor»: la metáfora amor fuego en la estructura de <i>Celestina</i> by Antonio Sánchez Jiménez

    Published 2021-01-01
    “…The expression appears in connection to two famous urban fires of classical Antiquity: those of Troy and Rome. Fiery love played a decisive role in these two well-known fires, and that connection implies that both the love as fire metaphor and urban fires warn the reader about the tragical end of Celestina’s lovers. …”
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  17. 117

    L’empreinte du théâtre dans la conscience globale by Maria Orquídea Leite de Faria Borges-Bispo

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…The Imprint of the Theater in the Global Consciousness By observing the painting of the eighteenth century, we are witnessing, so to speak, a pictorial earthquake: on the one hand, the neo-classicism that follows the model of classical antiquity in search of a simple, sober, capable style to convey serious moral values such as justice, honor and patriotism; on the other, the romantic movement, which is projected in the opposite direction and approaches the modern by focusing on the capacity for expression. …”
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  18. 118

    Perennial Penelope and lingering lotus-eaters: Revaluing mythological figures in the poetry of the Greek financial crisis by Philippou, E

    Published 2018
    “…This article looks specifically at the manner in which these poetic anthologies speak (if at all) to Greece’s classical antiquity. I explore the ways in which specific poets, who circulate in different spheres of publication (blogs, online magazines, literary journals, and published collections), engage antiquity in their poetry. …”
    Journal article
  19. 119

    How to do things with signs: Rousseau’s ancient performative idiom by Lifschitz, AS

    Published 2016
    “…The article examines the performative aspects of this imagined ancient language, while situating it within the context of other eighteenth-century projections of a vivid language of action onto classical antiquity. It is argued that Rousseau’s originality lies not only in his emphasis on the performative rather than merely passionate character of this idiom. …”
    Journal article
  20. 120