Octavian Report: Why should we read the Odyssey?
Daniel Mendelsohn: There's a reason the classics are classics — and it's not because they have better agents than books that aren't classics. The classics are classics because they pose in a way that is lively and narratively interesting and challenging the most basic questions about human experience. The Greek and Roman classics are the foundation for our way of seeing the world. And therefore we read them because they tell us something true about life. In the case of the Odyssey, aside from everything else it is, it's one of the great family dramas. It's about homecoming, it's about the meaning of home, it's about how you know and how you prove your intimacy with members of your family. It's about the bonds that connect family members over many years despite time and distance.
Dalla bellissima intervista a Daniel Mendelsohn sul perché leggere i classici, substack
Inoltre ...
The word ‘hoax’ did not catch on till the early 19th century. Before that
one spoke of a hum, a frump, a prat or a bilk. But 18th-century
Britain, even if not rife with talk of ‘hoaxes’, was full of incautious
souls at risk of being bilked. Ian Keable, The Century of Deception: The Birth of the Hoax in Eighteenth-Century England (Westbourne Press). Henry Hitchings, The Spectator
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