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Join us for Part 4 of the Odyssey where Odysseus is finally back home in Ithaca after years away. There are several rough encounters with the Suitors, a lot of testing of loyalty, and many more tearful reunions.
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Part 3 of the Odyssey bring some of its most iconic episodes: Odysseus' hoodwinking of the cyclops, the terrors of Scylla and Charybdis, the black magic of Circe, a start-studded trip through Hades, and Odysseus' arrival back in Ithaca.
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エピソードを見逃しましたか?
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Sink your teeth into Part 2 of the Odyssey, wherein Odysseus meets Princess Nausicaa in a scene of titillating nudity, a bard regales us with a raunchy tale of godly adultery, and the lotus eaters lure Odysseus' men with a tantalizing fruit.
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The Odyssey begins with Odysseus held captive on the island of the goddess Calypso while, back home in Ithaca, his son Telemachus sets off in search of news of his father. Telemachus reaches Sparta and there hears the story of the Trojan Horse.
A thanks to LibriVox and Mark Nelson for the readings.
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The finale for our four-part Iliad series. This last section is chock full of engrossing scenes, from Achilles' fight with a river god to the death of Hector, the funeral games for Patroclus, King Priam's visit to the Greek camp, and more!
Thanks again to Gene Kim, our reader for the week and a PhD student in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at Harvard.
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Things get rollin' in part three as major warriors on both sides incur grave wounds and fall dead. And Achilles at last launches out violently onto the battlefield, resplendent in heavenly armor.
A big thanks to Gene Kim, our reader for the week and a PhD student in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at Harvard.
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Homer takes us for a brief trip inside Troy, we wade through a some filler chapters, and Hera seduces Zeus.
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We launch into the vast Greek war epic that is the Iliad and lay down some background.
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Anton Chekov's In the Ravine is one of the longest stories he wrote. It is a microscopic view of the sociological changes afoot at the time. Greed and jealousy run rife through the narrative of this tragedy, but Chekov's humour and astute observations make this story an engrossing read.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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The second half of Tolstoy's novella provides masterful character descriptions of the Russian and Chechen leaders and draws to a spectacularly bloody and moving close.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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This week, an underappreciated masterpiece from the great Leo Tolstoy. We're introduced to the Chechen protagonist and given a taste of the senselessness of the war being executed by the Russians.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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In Dostoevsky's Notes from the Underground, a Russian George Costanza lays out his elaborate, neurotic philosophy, describes his awkward experience of a party, and reveals the cruelty with which he confronted a prostitute.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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In part two of Asya, we learn of the forces that have shaped her into the strange, wonderful creature that she is and the narrator's innocent love affair comes to a head.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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This week we move on to a gem of a short story by Ivan Turgenev. We enjoy a vicarious summer in the German countryside and follow in the first footsteps of the narrator's lover for the enigmatic Asya.
A thanks to Lewis Wright, our reader for this week! And check out Street Orchestra Live here.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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Listen on Patreon and find links to this week's and next week's readings.We end our journey through A Hero of Our Time with its final climactic duel and a discussion of the strange way in which Lermontov predicted the end of his own life.This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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We bite into the meatiest part of A Hero of Our Time. Pechorin displays the full depth of his manipulative psychology, weaponizing it against his rival and double, Grushnitsky.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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This week we cover the Maxim Maximych and Taman chapters of Mikhail Lermontov's A Hero of Our time. Get ready for your fill of Gothic ambience, Romantic smugglers, and tricky water nymphs.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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Mikhail Lermontov's A Hero of Our time is composed of five separate short stories that exhibit the full gamut of Romantic sensibilities and fiction genres popular in contemporary Russia. We begin this week with the first chapter: Bela.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
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Part two of Dead Souls closes out with some more farcical haggling, a tangent so strange we lose the main character, and then a final explanation of this protagonist's background and drives.
This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle.
Episode 14 — Dead Souls — Part 2
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Dead Souls is widely considered to be the comic masterpiece of Russian literature. We dive into the first part of the novel and encounter a slick, scheming protagonist, a deluge of detail, and Russian landowners who range from the cloyingly chummy to the excitably pugilistic.This episode is part of our 19th century Russian literature cycle. - もっと表示する