Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
12 Μαρ 2013 · Whether defined as a rhetorical exercise, a literary genre (or mode), a narrative digression, a species of description, or a poetic (even metapoetic or meta-representational) technique, the properties associated with ancient ekphrasis are not in doubt.
A figure of speech (σχήμα λόγου) or rhetorical figure[1] is figurative language in the form of a single word or phrase. It can be a special repetition, arrangement or omission of words with literal meaning, or a phrase with a specialized meaning not based on the literal meaning of the words.
A Greek figure of speech, known as "rhetorical device," is a technique used to produce specific effects in speech or writing, enhancing its meaning and impact. Common examples include metaphors, similes, and rhetoric.
1 Απρ 2014 · The Greek term ecphrasis (ἔκφρασις) is attested from around the first century AD onward.
Greek Metaphors: Figures of speech where one thing is described in terms of another, offering symbolic meanings that are understood within the cultural context of ancient Greece. Deep Dive: In ancient Greek culture, metaphors were not limited to literature.
In the classical period of Greek literature, Homer was the primary representative of what we know as epic. The figure of Homer as a poet of epic was considered to be far older than the oldest known poets of lyric, who stemmed from the archaic period.
Modern Greek literature is significantly influenced by the Diafotismos, a movement that translated the ideas of the European Enlightenment into the Greek world. Adamantios Korais and Rigas Feraios are two prominent figures of this movement.