000 02289cim a2200421Ka 4500
001 ocm48496130
003 OCoLC
005 20251028120633.0
008 011128s2000 vaunnnn r l n eng d
007 sd fungnn|||eu
035 _a(Sirsi) i9781565853195
035 _a(Sirsi) i9781565853195
040 _aWIM
_cWIM
_dTEF
_dOCL
_dVF$
020 _a1565853199
020 _a9781565853195
028 0 2 _a303
_bTeaching Company
035 _a(OCoLC)48496130
043 _ae------
_aff-----
_aaw-----
050 1 4 _aDVD PA 6825
_b.V36 1999
049 _aVF$A
100 1 _aVandiver, Elizabeth,
_d1956-
245 1 4 _aThe Aeneid of Virgil
_h[sound recording] /
_cElizabeth Vandiver.
260 _aSpringfield, VA :
_bTeaching Co.,
_cc1999.
300 _a6 sound discs (ca. 360 min.) :
_bdigital ;
_c4 3/4 in. +
_e1 course guidebook (62 p. ; 22 cm.).
511 0 _aLecturer: Elizabeth Vandiver.
500 _aCompact discs.
500 _aIn container (26 cm.).
520 _aPresents Virgil's epic poem about Aeneas and his journey west from ruined Troy to the founding of a new nation in Italy. The Aeneid is an examination of leadership, a study of the conflict between duty and desire, a meditation on the relationship of the individual to society and of art to life, and a Roman's reflection on the dangers, and the allure, of Hellenistic culture. It represents both Virgil's tribute to Homer, and his attempt to re-imagine and surpass the Homeric model.
505 0 0 _glecture 1.
_tIntroduction --
_glecture 2.
_tFrom Aeneas to Romulus --
_glecture 3.
_tRome, Augustus, and Virgil --
_glecture 4.
_tThe opening of the Aeneid --
_glecture 5.
_tFrom Troy to Carthage --
_glecture 6.
_tUnhappy Dido --
_glecture 7.
_tFuneral games and a journey to the dead --
_glecture 8.
_tItaly and the future --
_glecture 9.
_tVirgil's Iliad --
_glecture 10.
_tThe inevitable doom of Turnus --
_glecture 11.
_tThe gods and fate --
_glecture 12.
_tThe end of the Aeneid and beyond.
600 0 0 _aVirgil.
_tAeneis.
600 0 0 _aVirgil
_xCriticism and interpretation.
650 0 _aAeneas (Legendary character) in literature.
650 0 _aEpic poetry, Latin
_xHistory and criticism.
651 0 _aRome
_xIn literature.
710 2 _aTeaching Company.
830 0 _aGreat courses (Compact disc)
999 _c139333
_d139333