Greek Literature

Henry Julius Wetenhall Tillyard (1881 - 1968)

"The Greeks were the most intellectual people of the old world. … The study of Greek literature is therefore a proper element in a liberal education. The Greek language, naturally flexible and rich in poetical words, becomes in the hands of the great writers a medium of unequalled force, clearness, and adaptability, able to express as well the highest aspirations of the poet as the subtlest shades of philosophical argument or the most abstruse technicalities. The books of Greece have passed the critical selection of the ages, and the student, unencumbered by masses of inferior material, can approach the works of acknowledged masters, the true fountain-head of European culture." - Summary taken from the Introduction

Genre(s): Literary Criticism, Social Science (Culture & Anthropology)

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 00 Introduction Devorah Allen
00:03:08
Play 01 Homer and the Epic Heather Eney
00:18:46
Play 02 Lyric, Elegiac, and Iambic Poetry Jeremy Silver
00:20:42
Play 03 Tragedy Emily Maynard
00:24:27
Play 04 Comedy Jennifer Wilson
00:08:31
Play 05 Early Greek Prose: Herodotus, Thucydides Heather Eney
00:25:54
Play 06 Philosophy: Plato, Aristotle Emily Maynard
00:22:28
Play 07 Oratory: Isocrates, Demosthenes Jennifer Wilson
00:12:56
Play 08 The Hellenistic and Roman Ages Katina Papadakis
00:21:50