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Hesiod's Theogony (Focus Classical Library) First Edition
Purchase options and add-ons
- ISBN-100941051005
- ISBN-13978-0941051002
- EditionFirst Edition
- PublisherFocus Information Group
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1987
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions5 x 0.28 x 9 inches
- Print length129 pages
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- Publisher : Focus Information Group; First Edition (January 1, 1987)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 129 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0941051005
- ISBN-13 : 978-0941051002
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.28 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #411,989 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #244 in Ancient & Classical Literature
- #592 in Mythology (Books)
- #11,471 in Classic Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book provides good explanatory information and a thorough overview of the ancient text. They describe it as a good value for 99 cents. However, some customers find the language unclear, with spelling errors and difficult to read. The introduction is written in formal prose without any additional material.
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Customers appreciate the book's brevity. They find it detailed with good explanatory information and extensive commentary. The running annotations provide a thorough introduction and overview of the ancient text. Readers describe the book as inexpensive and readable.
"...West is also the editor of a Greek text, with extensive commentary...." Read more
"...It was very detailed and offered a lot of good explanatory information on the side." Read more
"...That said, it's inexpensive and it's readable." Read more
"This was a thoroughly gods read of the birth of the gods and the extraordinary myths that ensued from the birth of Cronos to the triumph of Zeus" Read more
Customers appreciate the book's value for money. They say it's fine for 99 cents.
"...It really worth every penny...." Read more
"...No supplemental material whatsoever. Okay for 99 cents. And of course it’s not that long, anyway...." Read more
"...That said, it's inexpensive and it's readable." Read more
Customers find the book's language unclear, with spelling errors and poor proofreading. They also mention it's difficult to read and written in a formal style.
"There were some misspelled words on here. Unclear language. I think there could've been some footnotes for the Greek words used...." Read more
"...help explain that which wasn't obvious, but this edition was rife with spelling errors and needed better proof-reading." Read more
"...reviews here I'm going to have to give this a 3--the translation was just plain hard to read, even though I do like the verse format as opposed to..." Read more
"...It's prose (not verse) and contains no supplemental material beyond a simple list of locations mentioned in the text...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2003This is a review of the extensively annotated translation of "Hesiod's Theogony" by Richard S. Caldwell -- just in case, as sometimes happens, it appears with a different translation. For those who are not familiar with it already, this is an account, in Homeric verse, of how the organized universe arose, expressed through generations of gods, their struggles for supremacy, and the culminating triumph of Zeus, with the great Olympians and a multitude of nature-deities listed along the way. Told in noble hexameters, it is an extremely violent story, full of abusive parents, mutilations inflicted by rebellious offspring, divine cannibalism, and a whole succession of other behaviors the Greeks themselves considered repellent. The philosophers had real problems with this work -- one can understand why Plato wanted to ban poets from the ideal state.
As it happens, I own most (but not quite all) of the currently or recently available English translations: those by Apostolos N. Athanassakis, Norman O. Brown, Hugh G. Evelyn-White (bilingual edition, Loeb Classical Library), R.M. Frazer, Richmond Lattimore, Dorothea Wender (Penguin Classics), and M. L. West (Oxford World's Classics). Except for Brown, who also covers only the "Theogony," they all contain at least the other main Hesiodic poem, "Works and Days" as a companion piece. West is also the editor of a Greek text, with extensive commentary. In this crowded field, in which the renderings of Athanassakis and Lattimore are notable for the quality of their poetry, Caldwell stakes a claim to utility.
The introduction contains numerous tables, displaying the relationships of various sets of gods, nymphs, monsters, and others, His translation is set out in verse lines, with running numbers at intervals of five, which makes locating references extremely easy. (No headnotes identifying thirty or fifty-line blocks of material!) An essay on the "Psychology of the Succession Myth" (rather simplistically Freudian, but interesting) is followed by a translation of some the most important related material from "Works and Days," and (hurray) parallel passages from a late prose compendium of Greek mythology, the Bibliotheke of Apollodoros (better known as the "Library of Apollodorus"). He has a useful (if now slightly dated) discussion of the main Near Eastern parallels. (Brown also discusses the comparative and psychological aspects of the poem, from different perspectives; his psychological treatment seems to me subtler, and more closely related to the political reading he offers.) [To be fair, I should have mentioned when this review was originally posted that Caldwell is here offering a simplified form of the argument in his 1985 book "The Origin of the Gods: A Psychoanalytic Study of Greek Theogonic Myth."]
There is a very good index-glossary. Most useful of all, however, are the running annotations. They range from the most elementary (assuming no prior knowledge of Greek myth or literature) to impressively advanced (issues of structure, technique, and deeper meanings). Caldwell explains that he has drawn heavily on West's commentary, which is nice, because West himself incorporated many of his conclusions implicitly in his prose translation, without the arguments that accompanied his text editions.
Given Caldwell's attention to detail, if you are a novice in the field who doesn't plan to build up even a small collection, but is willing to read a single volume with close attention, this might be your best choice. Those who already know the subject are likely to find it attractive, although sorting through such basic reminders as "Zephyros is the west wind, Boreas the north wind" in search of interpretive insights can be a test of patience.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2009I purchased this book for a mythology class I am taking. It really worth every penny. Notes are recorded throughout the poem, so if you aren't 100% clear about what a line means or what it is referencing to - you can easily find out. This book is full of great information if you are interested in greek gods and how the world came to be (in the eyes of greeks in the archaic age).
- Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2016great
- Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2024There were some misspelled words on here. Unclear language.
I think there could've been some footnotes for the Greek words used. I'm grateful for the translation, but disappointed with how sexist it was. Well, I guess I shouldn't be shocked.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2021The plays are long, but interesting. You would need to find a summary on google to understand what happens in each of the plays.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2014After reading Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, something I've wanted to do for many years, I was intrigued by the backstory of the Greek gods mythology. After doing some research on the available titles, this particular one answered all my questions and more. It was very detailed and offered a lot of good explanatory information on the side.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2016One of history's first books, this tome with Homer's tales was used as reference material for the beginnings of Greek mythology. The numerous annotations help explain that which wasn't obvious, but this edition was rife with spelling errors and needed better proof-reading.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2011I like the format of this book for the chapters about Hesiod's Theogony story (I guess it's really a poem). Hesiod's statements appear at the top of the page and then Caldwell's explanations appear at the bottom of the page.
I haven't read many books about Greek mythology so this format allowed me to absorb Hesiod's story in a gradual way as Caldwell explained it and related it to other books and writers. Caldwell's commentary is excellent.
I wouldn't say I exactly enjoy reading books like this. The information is too detached from our current world view as the violent and troubled 'Age Of Iron' apparently approaches its conclusion. I view reading books like this more as important research.
Interesting for me in the Theogony is how the Muses described the various mythological beings. They all seem to have unique personalities, different tendencies towards good or evil, etc.. Hera is golden sandaled, Arphrodite loves laughter, Athena is owl eyed, Medusa was unlucky, etc..
Hesiod said the Muses, daughters of Zeus, appeared to him and revealed the Theogony. The Muses "delight in banquets and the pleasure of song".
Poseidon has a female alter ego named Posidaija and the great Earth Embracer is always associated with the number three.
All of these metaphors mean something.
As far as what these stories actually mean I don't know. I'm not sure anyone does. The true meanings may not be easily understandable or expressible in verbal language.
Plato felt that the myth of Zeus abducting Ganymedes was a lie created by the Cretes to justify their own behaviors. I guess the accuracy of such an old story can be questioned.
I can add that there are deep and mystical relationships between mythology, Christianity, and the bible. Poseidon's trident represents the idea of the Holy Trinity. Caldwell says the trident is a phallic symbol which is also true.
The lines between Christianity and those older religions are not nearly as black and white as some people might believe. In fact just the opposite is true.
I'm taking off one star for the chapter where Caldwell tries to explain the story from a psychological perspective. His comments remind me of Freud who I have never been a great fan of. My interpretation of what he said is Hesiod's story is fiction which was inspired by the fears, superstitions, and misunderstandings of the ancient Greeks plus childhood questions and feelings that are common to all races.
That's all dead wrong. Zeus and those others are real. The mythological stories are true although they are based on a metaphysical, not a literal, reality. This is true not only of Greek mythology but also Egyptian mythology, the Mayan myths, and others. Some of those super beings like Zeus and Apollo appear in other mythologies such as the Egyptian under different names. Horus became Apollo I think. Aset became Isis.
Set, the Egyptian god of chaos, has returned to our current age and created a Satanic religion called The Temple Of Set. The sinister Anton Levy, the author of The Satanic Bible, was perhaps the mythological Prometheus returned. If people would like to go insane and perhaps lose their lives they should go out to those web sites and experiment with those ancient rituals.
Edgar Cayce was I believe the reincarnation of the great Egyptian god Osiris. In Cayce's alternative history of ancient Egypt he himself as the Atlantean priest Ra Ta, together with Thoth and Horus, was directly involved with the construction of the monuments on the Giza necropolis.
The field of Egyptology today is a sorry quagmire of unsubstantiated theories that have no basis in reality.
People today are only beginning to fathom what the Great Pyramid really is.
Jeff Marzano
Zeus: A Journey Through Greece in the Footsteps of a God
Fulcanelli: Master Alchemist: Le Mystere des Cathedrales, Esoteric Intrepretation of the Hermetic Symbols of The Great Work (Le Mystere Des ... of the Hermetic Symbols of Great Work)
The Giza Power Plant : Technologies of Ancient Egypt
Fingerprints of the Gods
Initiation
Edgar Cayce's Egypt: Psychic Revelations on the Most Fascinating Civilization Ever Known
The Mystery of the Crystal Skulls: Unlocking the Secrets of the Past, Present, and Future
Atlantis
Ufo...Contact from Planet Iarga
The Lives of Edgar Cayce
Top reviews from other countries
ConnorReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 3, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Useful if you're studying classics
Smaller than I expected, needed it for a dissertation. Though when I saw the size I was relieved as this was one of many texts I needed to read. It's a classic (literally) and it sounds cool if you can reference it in normal conversation so why not ? On a more serious note, it's fairly good quality, posting was swift and I had no issues at all.
W. A. StringerReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 26, 20213.0 out of 5 stars Bedtime reading
The introduction says it usually tak3s 30 minutes to read. It took me 4 days, reading at bed time.
A good book to send you to sleep.
JD MiltonReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 23, 20185.0 out of 5 stars not the longest book in the world. still, who ain't got a copy of hesiod's theogony? buy it!
when you are looking for a copy of hesiod's theogony, as you do, this one, is precisely what you need, to cover that base. great purchase. recommended.
Mr. Gregory MacisaacReviewed in Canada on July 23, 20132.0 out of 5 stars Misleading book information
This is the Caldwell translation, but this edition does not have his Introduction, Commentary or Interpretive Essay, even though these are listed on the cover of the copy that is shown when you click on "Look Inside."
InkypenReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 2, 20145.0 out of 5 stars Much better than the last Hesiod
This one has line numbers. Hooray! They are a bit general - but quotable, which gives anyone marking a piece of writing some means of locating the text. It's the second copy of Hesiod I've bought - it's worth spending a little bit more.







