Hesiod's Anvil

Hesiod's Anvil
Author: Andrew J. Simoson
Publisher: MAA
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2007-07-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780883853368

This book is about how poets, philosophers, storytellers, and scientists have described motion, beginning with Hesiod, who imagined that the expanse of heaven and the depth of hell was the distance that an anvil falls in nine days. The reader will learn that Dante's implicit model of the earth implies a black hole at its core, that Edmond Halley championed a hollow earth, and that Da Vinci knew that the acceleration due to Earth's gravity was a constant. There are chapters modeling Jules Verne's and H.G. Wells' imaginative flights to the moon and back, analyses of Edgar Alan Poe's descending pendulum, and the solution to an old problem perhaps inspired by one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. It blends with equal voice romantic whimsy and derived equations, and anyone interested in mathematics will find new and surprising ideas about motion and the people who thought about it.

Homer and the Poetics of Gesture

Homer and the Poetics of Gesture
Author: Alex C. Purves
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2019
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0190857927

This book draws on studies of movement, gesture, and early film to offer a series of readings on repetition through the body in Homer. Each chapter presents an argument based on a specific posture, action or gesture (falling, running, leaping, standing, and crouching), through which to rethink epic practices of embodiment and formularity.

The Heavens

The Heavens
Author: Jean-Henri Fabre
Publisher:
Total Pages: 392
Release: 1924
Genre: Astronomy
ISBN:

Hesiod

Hesiod
Author: Hesiod
Publisher:
Total Pages: 710
Release: 1920
Genre:
ISBN: