Archive for the 'Greek Mythology' Category
Bibliotheca Alexandria-
• November 15, 2007 • Leave a CommentPosted in "war criminal", 'Mahabharata', 'Ramayana', Aeolian dialect of Greek, Aeolic Word pais, algebraic forumulae, Ancient Greece, ancient languages, ancient scribes, ancient scrolls, anthropology, Antiquity, aristocracy, art, art and society, Art Anthologies, Art History, Art&Poetry, Artistic Genres, Avadha, barbarians, Beat Generation, Beat Literature, Beat Poets, Bhudevi, biblica climax, bibliophile, Bibliotheca Alexandria, Bloody Hands, Bohemia, books, Caliph Omar, Ceasar, clandestine operations, community, creative writing, creativity, cult of personality, cultural icons, cultural legacy, culture, dactylic hexameter, dactylic tetrameter, Daughter of Zeus, deliquescence, Demetrius Phalereus, Destruction of Idolatrous Greek Temples/libraries, Dionysius, disembodied poetics, Diyas, economics, education, Ephemeral Memory, epigraphs, Epithalamia, Eros, Glyconic Meter, Goethe, Greece, Greek history/literature, Greek Mythology, Greek Tenth Muse, Harvest Festivals, Hecate, Hellenic Knowledge, Hellenic Peoples, History, Hymn to Aphrodite, Hypatia, Iconic Imagery, ignored genres, Intellectual Milieu, intelligentsia, Jack Kerouac, Jai Ambe Gauri, Kierkegaard, Library of Ptolemis, life, Linguistics, Literary coterie, Literary Group, Literary Legacy, literature, Love of Phaon, Lyric Poetess, mathematicians, Milwaukee artists, Milwaukee writers, Mother Goddess, Musaeum, Mythology, Oxyrhynchus remains, Palla Athene, Papyrus fragments, Phainetai Moi, phalli of Priapus, Philosophy, Pillars of Hercules, Platonic Idealism, Platonis School, Pleiades, poet Alcaeus, Poetics, poetry, Pomona Goddess of Fruits, Posidippus of Pella, Post-Beat Era, post-Beat Poetry Community, Ptolemy, pyschology, race, rhythmical grumbles, sacred texts, Sagas Legends, Sappho, Sappho's Aeolic dialect, scripted narratives, sculpture, sociology, Sourdough Mountain, Symbolist, synonym sapphie, technology, Temple of Muses, The Women of Beat, travel, writing
Tags: 2008 Wikimania, ancient Roman scribes, ancient scrolls/parchment, ancient society, Antique literature/languages, Antiquity, archeology, art, barbarians, Bibliotheca Alexandria, Caliph Omar, Ceasar, Demetrius Phalereus, education, Egypt, Greek literature, Hellenic Knowledge, Hellenic Peoples, History, Hypatia, Idolatrous Temples, Intellectual Milieu, Library of Alexandria, Library of Ptolemis, literature, Media, Musaeum, News, personal, phalli of Priapus, Platonis School, Plutarch, Ptolemy II/III, society, technology, Temple of Muses, travel, wiki phenomenon, WikiMedia Foundation, Wikipedia, world's largest library, writing
Oxyrhynchus Remains…
• October 27, 2007 • Leave a CommentPosted in Aeolian dialect of Greek, Aeolic Word pais, Ancient Greece, ancient languages, Apocryphal, aristocracy, art, art and society, Art Anthologies, Art History, artists, creative writing, creativity, cult of personality, cultural icons, cultural legacy, culture, dactylic hexameter, dactylic tetrameter, Daughter of Zeus, Dionysius, Ed Sanders, Epithalamia, European Renaissance, feminism, femme fatale, gender equality, Greek Mythology, Greek Tenth Muse, Homoerotica, Hymn to Aphrodite, Island of Lesbos, Leucadian cliffs, life, Literary coterie, Literary Group, Literary Legacy, literature, love, Love of Phaon, Lyric Poetess, Metrics & Verse of Sappho, open eroticism, Oxyrhynchus remains, Palla Athene, Papyrus fragments, Phainetai Moi, Philosophy, Platonic Idealism, Pleiades, poet Alcaeus, poetry, Poets/Icons, Posidippus of Pella, sacred texts, Sagas Legends, Sappho, Sappho's Aeolic dialect, synonym sapphie, Thirsting for Peace in a Raging Century, Women of Mytilene, Writing & Poetics
Tags: Aeolic Word pais, Ancient Greece, ancient languages, Aphrodite, Apocryphal, aristocracy, art, Croesus, culture, dactylic hexameter, dactylic tetrameter, Ed Sanders, education, epic poetry, Epithalamia, European Renaissance, feminism, Homoerotica, inspiration, Island of Lesbos, Journal, King Midas, Leucadian cliffs, life, Literary Group, Literary Legacy, literature, Love of Phaon, Lyric Poetess, Oxyrhynchus remains, Papyrus fragments, Pleiades, poetry, politics, Posidippus of Pella, Sappho, Sappho's Aeolic dialect, Thirsting for Peace in a Raging Century, travel, writing
Sappho- Fundamentalist Aphroditean
• October 20, 2007 • Leave a CommentPosted in Aeolian dialect of Greek, art, art and society, Art History, artists, books, community, creativity, cult of personality, cultural icons, cultural legacy, culture, Daughter of Zeus, Dionysius, Ed Sanders, femme fatale, Fundamentalist Aphroditean, Glyconic Meter, Greek Mythology, Greek Tenth Muse, Homoerotica, Hymn to Aphrodite, life, literature, Metrics & Verse of Sappho, open eroticism, Phainetai Moi, poet Alcaeus, poetry, Poets/Icons, sacred texts, Sappho, Women of Mytilene, writing
Tags: Aeolian dialect of Greek, Blog, Blogging, classics, contemporary of the poet Alcaeus, culture, Daughter of Zeus, Dionysius, Ed Sanders-A Tribute to Sappho, Fundamentalist Aphroditean, Glyconic Meter, Greece, Greek Tenth Muse, Homoerotica, Hymn to Aphrodite, Island of Lesbos, Metrics & Verse of Sappho, Mixo-Lydian, Musings, people, Phainetai Moi, Philosophy, poetry, random, Sappho, Sappho legacy, Shakespeare-level mystery, war, Women of Mytilene, writing
Gesamtkunstwerk-
• October 11, 2007 • Leave a CommentPosted in American Artists, art, art and society, artists, cinema, community, counterculture, creativity, cult of personality, cultural icons, culture, deliquescence, fine art, galleries, Gesamtkunstwerk, Greek Mythology, life, Matthew Barney, Painting, performance art, Photography, popular culture, pyschology, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Franciso artists, scripted narratives, theatre, Video art
Tags: alternative film/art/performance, American Artists, art, creativity, cult of personality, deliquiescence embodied, Drawing Restraint series, drawings, Greek Mythology themes, London, Matthew Barney, Painting, Photography, San Francisco artists, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, scripted narratives, sculpture, Serpentine Gallery, video
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