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This section contains 2,991 words (approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page) |
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SOURCE: “Ancient Greek Myth in Angelos Sikelianos,” in Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 7, 1981, pp. 105-17.
In the following essay, Keeley considers the role of Greek mythology in Sikelianos's verse.
In the introduction to Angelos Sikelianos: Selected Poems,1 the translators speak of Sikelianos's ‘mythological attitude … toward life’ and of his conception of myth not so much ‘as a rhetorical or metaphorical device but as a spontaneous creation of the human soul directed toward the revelation of a hidden spiritual life’, in short, of mythology as a kind of religion closely related to Schelling's perception of the function of myth. These remarks, written originally some years ago, may have their just proportion of truth, but in keeping with most introductory remarks, they strike me as rather too general, rather too undiscriminating when one brings them face to face with Sikelianos's practice at different moments of his career. I want...
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This section contains 2,991 words (approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page) |
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