Poēō (“make”) > Poēsis (“making”) > Poēmata (“things made”; “poems”) Poēō (“make”) > Poēsis (“making”) > Poēmata (“things made”; “poems”) Lyric Poetry: Song accompanied by Music (lyre); Monody or Chorus Alcaeus, Alcman, Anacreon, Archilochus, Bacchylides, Corinna, Praxilla,Telesilla,Tyrtaeus, Sappho
Homer, Iliad and Odyssey Homer, Iliad and Odyssey Hesiod, Theogony, Works and Days - Theogony -- Omniscient, Invisible Third-Person Narration
- Works and Days - First Person Narration at Beginning of Poem; Address to Brother Perses
What difficulties might the relationship between changes in Greek sculptural art and Greek lyric poetry present in terms of historical methodology? Can we posit a common factors in historical causation? What difficulties might the relationship between changes in Greek sculptural art and Greek lyric poetry present in terms of historical methodology? Can we posit a common factors in historical causation? Can we say that in Greek lyric poetry of the seventh and sixth centuries BCE we are witnessing the birth of the individual in western literature?
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