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I'm reading and talking about Ted Gioia's "Immersive Humanities Course," 52 weeks of World Classics.
An interesting combination this week. Ted Gioia, the creator of my reading list, called it “Love and War,” but it felt like a lot more than that. And last week, I called it a hodgepodge, but I can admit I was wrong.
Plato’s Symposium is the third of Plato’s works on this list. After wrestling with Ethics in particular last week, I was happy to get back to my friend. Symposium is written as a dialogue among friends, recalled by one who wasn’t there, a little like the game of “Telephone” we’e all played. The friends’ topic? Love, specifically eros. Given that this is upper-class Ancient Greece, there is a significant discussion of love between men; honestly romantic love between men and women is practically ignored.
The reading plan only covered a few portion of Herodotus’ Histories, Books 1 and 6-8. For full disclosure, I did NOT complete the reading but stopped with Book 7. In my edition of Histories the assigned books were more than 350 pages and I simply ran out of time. If I had done all the reading this week I would have been around 430 pages! Given that I “signed up” for about 250 pages per week, I had to stop. Confession time over.
As always, I have so many, many thoughts about these works. For Symposium, I summarized each person’s eulogy as a way to get my hands around the text. A few ideas:
On to Herodotus. He’s been on my radar since I read History of the Ancient World by Susan Wise Bauer about a year and a half ago, and seeing him on the reading list was part of my motivation to jump in. He did not disappoint. The sections that I read were the origin stories of Croesus and Cyrus, and Persia, and then the beginning of the Persian War. I ended with the Battle of Thermopylae, which is an amazing story in its own right. A few takeaways:
I could keep writing a long, long time, but it would get boring. I loved reading the Histories, but probably my favorite role of Herodotus was “anthropologist.” There were so many different cultures that clashed in that area and he was alert to all the differences: the matrilineal Lycians; the cannibalistic Scythians; the dual-monarchist Spartans. He digresses and chats and then gets back to the story.
If you are interested in reading this, I can’t recommend The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories, edited by Robert Strassler, enough. It’s well-illustrated and -mapped and the translation (by Andrea Purvis) is eminently readable. The footnotes are just enough, without dominating your attention. This is how a history book should be.
This is a year-long challenge! Join me next week for Gilgamesh and the Dhammapada.
LINK
Ted Gioia/The Honest Broker’s 12-Month Immersive Humanities Course (paywalled!)
My Amazon Book List (NOT an affiliate link)
CONNECT
To read more of my writing, visit my Substack - https://www.cheryldrury.substack.com.
Follow me on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/cldrury/
LISTEN
Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5GpySInw1e8IqNQvXow7Lv?si=9ebd5508daa245bd
Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/crack-the-book/id1749793321
Captivate - https://crackthebook.captivate.fm
5
2121 ratings
I'm reading and talking about Ted Gioia's "Immersive Humanities Course," 52 weeks of World Classics.
An interesting combination this week. Ted Gioia, the creator of my reading list, called it “Love and War,” but it felt like a lot more than that. And last week, I called it a hodgepodge, but I can admit I was wrong.
Plato’s Symposium is the third of Plato’s works on this list. After wrestling with Ethics in particular last week, I was happy to get back to my friend. Symposium is written as a dialogue among friends, recalled by one who wasn’t there, a little like the game of “Telephone” we’e all played. The friends’ topic? Love, specifically eros. Given that this is upper-class Ancient Greece, there is a significant discussion of love between men; honestly romantic love between men and women is practically ignored.
The reading plan only covered a few portion of Herodotus’ Histories, Books 1 and 6-8. For full disclosure, I did NOT complete the reading but stopped with Book 7. In my edition of Histories the assigned books were more than 350 pages and I simply ran out of time. If I had done all the reading this week I would have been around 430 pages! Given that I “signed up” for about 250 pages per week, I had to stop. Confession time over.
As always, I have so many, many thoughts about these works. For Symposium, I summarized each person’s eulogy as a way to get my hands around the text. A few ideas:
On to Herodotus. He’s been on my radar since I read History of the Ancient World by Susan Wise Bauer about a year and a half ago, and seeing him on the reading list was part of my motivation to jump in. He did not disappoint. The sections that I read were the origin stories of Croesus and Cyrus, and Persia, and then the beginning of the Persian War. I ended with the Battle of Thermopylae, which is an amazing story in its own right. A few takeaways:
I could keep writing a long, long time, but it would get boring. I loved reading the Histories, but probably my favorite role of Herodotus was “anthropologist.” There were so many different cultures that clashed in that area and he was alert to all the differences: the matrilineal Lycians; the cannibalistic Scythians; the dual-monarchist Spartans. He digresses and chats and then gets back to the story.
If you are interested in reading this, I can’t recommend The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories, edited by Robert Strassler, enough. It’s well-illustrated and -mapped and the translation (by Andrea Purvis) is eminently readable. The footnotes are just enough, without dominating your attention. This is how a history book should be.
This is a year-long challenge! Join me next week for Gilgamesh and the Dhammapada.
LINK
Ted Gioia/The Honest Broker’s 12-Month Immersive Humanities Course (paywalled!)
My Amazon Book List (NOT an affiliate link)
CONNECT
To read more of my writing, visit my Substack - https://www.cheryldrury.substack.com.
Follow me on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/cldrury/
LISTEN
Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5GpySInw1e8IqNQvXow7Lv?si=9ebd5508daa245bd
Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/crack-the-book/id1749793321
Captivate - https://crackthebook.captivate.fm
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