archilochus and sappho

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Archilochus and Sappho Lyric Poetry: Literary Birth of Individual Consciousness (?)

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Archilochus and Sappho. Lyric Poetry: Literary Birth of Individual Consciousness (?). Greek Lyric Poetry (Seventh-Sixth Centuries BCE). Po ēō (“make”) > Poēsis (“making”) > Poēmata (“things made”; “poems”) Lyric Poetry: Song accompanied by Music (lyre); Monody or Chorus - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Archilochus and Sappho

Lyric Poetry: Literary Birth of

Individual Consciousness (?)

Page 2: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Greek Lyric Poetry (Seventh-Sixth Centuries BCE)

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

Page 3: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Sculpture and Artistic Convention

A Detour through the Plastic Arts

Page 4: Archilochus  and  Sappho

New York Kourosca. 600 BCE

Page 5: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Anavysos Kourosca. 530 BCE

Page 6: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Peplos Koreca. 530 BCE

Page 7: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Phrasikleia and Kouros in situAristion of Paros, ca. 540 BCE

Page 8: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Temple of Aphaia on AeginaWest Pediment (end 6th century BCE)

Page 9: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Temple of Aphaia on AeginaEast Pediment (after Persian wars?)

Page 10: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Temple of Aphaia on AeginaWest Pediment (end 6th century BCE)

Page 11: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Temple of Aphaia on AeginaEast Pediment (after Persian wars?)

Page 12: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Strangford Apolloca. 490 BCE (Lemnos?)

Page 13: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Critias Boy (Athens) ca. 480-475 BCE

Page 14: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Homeric Epic and Hesiodic Wisdom Poetry

Homer, Iliad and Odyssey Omniscient, Invisible Third-Person Narration

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

Page 15: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Greece, Coastal Asia Minor and Islands

Page 16: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Paros of the Cyclades (home of Archilochus)

Page 17: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Archilochus of Paros (ca. 680-640 BCE)

I am two things: a fighter who follows the Master of Battles,

And one who understands the gift of the Muses’ love.

Page 18: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Archilochus of Paros (ca. 680-640 BCE)

Some barbarian is waving my shield, since I was obliged to

Leave that perfectly good piece of equipment behind

Under a bush. But I got away, so what does it matter?

Let the shield go; I can buy another one equally good.

Page 19: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Archilochus of Paros (ca. 680-640 BCE)

So much I said, but then I took the girl into the flowers in bloom and laid her down, protecting her with my soft cloak, her neck held in my arms. Though out of fear like a fawn she hindered, I encouraged her and her breasts with my hands I gently grasped. She, there and then,

herself showed young flesh--the onset of her prime--and, all her lovely body fondling, I also let go with my force, just touching,

though, her tawny down.

Page 20: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Lesbos of the northern Aegean (home of Sappho)

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Sappho of Lesbos (ca. 620-550 BCE)

But I claim there will be some who remember us

when we are gone.

Page 22: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Sappho of Lesbos (ca. 620-550 BCE)

You will die and be still, never shall be memory left of you after this, nor regret when you are gone. You have not touched the flowers of the

Muses, and thus, shadowy still in the domain of Death, you must drift with a ghost’s fluttering wings, one of the darkened dead.

Page 23: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Sappho of Lesbos (ca. 620-550 BCE)

This is the dust of Timas, who died before she was married and whom Persephone’s dark chamber accepted instead. After her death the

maidens who were her friends, with sharp iron cutting their lovely hair, laid it upon her tomb.

Page 24: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Sappho of Lesbos (ca. 620-550 BCE)

Like the very gods in my sight is he who sits where he can look in your eyes, who listens close to you, to hear the soft voice, its sweetness murmur in love and

laughter, all for him. But it breaks my spirit; underneath my breast all the heart is shaken. Let me only glance where you are, the voice dies, I can say nothing, but my

lips are stricken to silence, underneath my skin the tenuous flame suffuses; nothing shows in front of my eyes, my ears are muted in thunder. And the sweat

breaks running upon me, fever shakes my body, paler I turn than grass is; I can feel that I have been changed, I feel that death has come near me.

Page 25: Archilochus  and  Sappho

Discussion Questions

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?