Kampos: Cambridge Papers in Modern Greek, Issues 13-14Modern Greek Section, Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages, University of Cambridge, 2006 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 14
Page 11
... vision , i.e. blindness as an allegory of vision and at a second level as an allegory of poetry itself . In the poem " My father's eye " she playfully poses the question of what the difference is between a real and a glass eye , since ...
... vision , i.e. blindness as an allegory of vision and at a second level as an allegory of poetry itself . In the poem " My father's eye " she playfully poses the question of what the difference is between a real and a glass eye , since ...
Page 12
... vision as the sense that leads to things themselves , to one's deeper truths . Vakalo goes even further , choosing blindness as one of her favourite allegories of vision . Particularly in the collection The meaning of the blind ( A 1962 ) ...
... vision as the sense that leads to things themselves , to one's deeper truths . Vakalo goes even further , choosing blindness as one of her favourite allegories of vision . Particularly in the collection The meaning of the blind ( A 1962 ) ...
Page 87
... vision . So the armies of Asia , together with the greater part of Hellenism , had time to forge the all powerful alliance of the Eastern peoples which , in the imagination of Eteokles and some other idealists , was going to create ...
... vision . So the armies of Asia , together with the greater part of Hellenism , had time to forge the all powerful alliance of the Eastern peoples which , in the imagination of Eteokles and some other idealists , was going to create ...
Contents
the case of Eleni Vakalo | 1 |
the making of the Modern Greek Physiologos | 23 |
a pioneer in the field of Modern | 47 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acropolis allegory ancient animals appears argued Athenian Athens become beginning bird blind Byzantine called Cambridge century changes chapter character classical codex collection critical culture Damascenos Dawkins described descriptions detail Dion early edition example experience fact father fiction folklore folktales freedom genre give given Greece hand Hellenism human important interest Italy kind language later letter literary literature London look manuscripts meaning Mithridates Modern Greek narrative novel Oxford past period person Physiologos Plate poem poet poetry political present Press printed published readers recent references represent Roman Rome Roufos scholars School seems seen sense social sources stories studies suggests symbolic Synathroisis tale tales things tourists tradition trans translation travel writers University Vakalo vision wanted writers written wrote Zarraftis καὶ