Credible Impossibilities: Conventions and Strategies of Verisimilitude in Homer and Greek TragedyVieweg+Teubner Verlag, 1999 - 216 pages |
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Page 26
... story, we will need to view it with a dual lens. Just as if we were wearing bifocals, through the lower lens we will gaze at individual stories from the Bible in chronological order. Think of these individual pieces as our Lower Story ...
... story, we will need to view it with a dual lens. Just as if we were wearing bifocals, through the lower lens we will gaze at individual stories from the Bible in chronological order. Think of these individual pieces as our Lower Story ...
Page
Richard Thomas Wyche Story - Teller and Lecturer on Story Telling Offers the following Programs , singly or in series : 1 Story of Ulysses 2 Story of King Arthur 3 Story of Siegfried 4 Story of Beowulf 5 Story of Hiawatha 6 Famous Folk ...
Richard Thomas Wyche Story - Teller and Lecturer on Story Telling Offers the following Programs , singly or in series : 1 Story of Ulysses 2 Story of King Arthur 3 Story of Siegfried 4 Story of Beowulf 5 Story of Hiawatha 6 Famous Folk ...
Page 44
... story is TOMS's participants. As they wear their TOMS shoes in the world, every time they get asked, “Where did you get those shoes?” they have a story to tell. It's a story they are proud to share because the story of TOMS shoes adds ...
... story is TOMS's participants. As they wear their TOMS shoes in the world, every time they get asked, “Where did you get those shoes?” they have a story to tell. It's a story they are proud to share because the story of TOMS shoes adds ...
Contents
Defining Credibility | 1 |
Homeric Chronology and Conventions of Inattention | 59 |
Inaccurate Prediction | 77 |
Copyright | |
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Achaeans Achilles action Aegisthus Aeneas Aeschylus Agamemnon Antigone Apollo apology argues Aristotle asks Athena authorial audience characters chorus Clytemnestra convention credibility Creon critics curse Cyclopes death Deianira divine drama Electra epic episode Eteocles Euripidean Euripides example expect explains fate fictional world gaps genre give gods Greek Hector Helen Hera Heracles Hermes hero Hippolytus Homeric Homeric narrative Hyllus Iliad implausible implies important inconsistencies interpretation intervention kill Laius Medea Menelaus messenger mortal motivation murder narrative audience narrator naturalization Neoptolemus Nestor Odysseus Oedipus oracle Orestes passages Patroclus Penelope Phaedra Philoctetes plausibility play plot poem poet Polynices Polyphemus Poseidon Priam problem prologue prophecy reader recognize relies rescue rule of inattention says seems Sophocles speech story suitors Telemachus tells Thebes thematic Theseus Thetis Tiresias tradition tragedians tragedy Trojans Troy University Press verisimilitude wine Women of Trachis Zeus ἀλλ γὰρ δὲ εἰ ἐν καὶ μὲν μοι τε ὡς