Item
Aisopos: Mikra Klassika Eikonographemena
- Title
- en_US Aisopos: Mikra Klassika Eikonographemena
- en_US Mikra Klassika Eikonographemena #214
- Description
- en_US Language note: Greek
- en_US M. Pechlibanides
- Creator
- en_US No Author See all items with this value
- Date
- 2016-01-25T19:28:21Z
- en_US 2004-03
- en_US 1955?
- Date Available
- 2016-01-25T19:28:21Z
- Date Issued
- en_US 1955
- Abstract
- en_US This forty-eight page comic book looks a great deal like Classics Illustrated Junior, and that would not be a bad translation anyway of mikra klassika eikonographemena. I am afraid that I am mostly baffled by what I find inside this comic book. It seems to be a biographical narrative, but there is not much help from the pictures to identify it with the known histories of Aesop's life, and my ancient Greek does not go a long way towards understanding the modern slang Greek. (Still, I am presuming that Cha, cha, is roughly our Ha, ha! I would have said that Aesopic fables are among the most concrete literature we have, but this comic baffles me with its lack of concrete objects in its pictures! I do find a statue of Hermes, a dog, and some coins. Have we arrived at Delphi on 43? The finale is a major conflagration. Was Aesop, thrown from the cliff by the Delphians, swept up in fire?
- Identifier
- en_US 4972 (Access ID)
- Language
- en_US gre
- Publisher
- en_US Ekdoseis M. Pechlivanidēs & Sia"
- en_US Athens
- Subject
- en_US PN6790.G73 V69 1955 See all items with this value
- Type
- en_US Book, Whole
- Item sets
- Carlson Fable Collection Books