word study

Deinos in Antigone

In the process of "Hero-izing" the text of Antigone, we were confronted with a word—deinos—that launches the Chorus’ famous ode on man (starting at line 332): "Wonders (ta deina) are many and none more wondrous (deinoteron) than man" (334, Jebb translation). This confident statement about man's achievements shifted and became problematic once we considered that deinos means paradoxically both "wonderful" and "terrible." Read more

Journey’s End

~A guest post by Jacqui Donlon and the Oinops Study Group~     “Yea, and if some god shall wreck me in the wine-dark deep, even so I will endure… For already have I suffered full much, and much… Read more

Oinops and Myth

~A guest post by Jacqui Donlon and the Oinops Study Group~  You may remember that at the end of our last post “Oinops, Sacrifice and Ritual,” we, the Oinops Study Group, decided to reach out to our Hour 25 Community for a mentor.  We had… Read more

Oinops, Sacrifice and Ritual

~ A guest blog by Jacqui Donlon and the Oinops Study Group~ “He looked all sorrowfully out upon the wine-faced [oinops] sea [pontos], and said, “Sperkheios, in vain did my father Peleus vow to you that when I returned home to my loved native land I… Read more