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Re: HISTORY: Marshall Fredericks and The Spirit of Detroit (247)
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06-18-2007 12:35 AM
http://info.detnews.com/history/story/index.cfm?id
Re: HISTORY: Selected Mayors of Detroit including Jerome Cavanaugh
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06-18-2007 12:41 AM
http://www.detroithistorical.org/learningcenter/cu
Re: HISTORY: Governor George Romney
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06-18-2007 12:44 AM
Re: HISTORY: Opa
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06-18-2007 12:51 AM
Anyways..this site has a lot of great urls related to Greek heritage
http://www.wttw.com/main.taf?p=1,7,1,1,16
Re: HISTORY: Opa
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06-18-2007 07:28 AM
bentley wrote:
Believe it means good cheer, cheers, success.
Anyways..this site has a lot of great urls related to Greek heritage
http://www.wttw.com/main.taf?p=1,7,1,1,16
Is an Opa a dance as well?
Re: HISTORY: Opa
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06-18-2007 04:29 PM
PaulH wrote:
bentley wrote:
Believe it means good cheer, cheers, success.
Anyways..this site has a lot of great urls related to Greek heritage
http://www.wttw.com/main.taf?p=1,7,1,1,16
Is an Opa a dance as well?
Paul, here is an article where the word is used. I think the Greeks shout out the word as they dance...so sometimes they call the dancing or music opa dance or opa music..but I think we need someone who is Greek to tell us for sure.
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=16129900
Re: HISTORY: Opa
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06-18-2007 04:34 PM
bentley wrote:
PaulH wrote:
bentley wrote:
Believe it means good cheer, cheers, success.
Anyways..this site has a lot of great urls related to Greek heritage
http://www.wttw.com/main.taf?p=1,7,1,1,16
Is an Opa a dance as well?
Paul, here is an article where the word is used. I think the Greeks shout out the word as they dance...so sometimes they call the dancing or music opa dance or opa music..but I think we need someone who is Greek to tell us for sure.
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=16129900&BRD=2605&PAG=461&dept_id=523946&rfi=6
Thanks, Bentley. I guess that's where I've heard it before -- during a dance -- and usually at festive occasions like weddings.
Re: HISTORY: Puccini
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06-19-2007 07:32 PM
The following url is about Puccini:
http://www.puccini.it/portale%20ing.htm
Re: HISTORY: Desdemona
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06-20-2007 12:36 AM
bentley wrote:
I am beginning to believe that the names of the characters themselves have additional significance.
Desdemona (tragic figure)as in Othello
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona_%28Othello%29
Re: HISTORY: Desdemona
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06-20-2007 02:45 PM - edited 06-20-2007 02:46 PM
JesseBC wrote:
Definitely! There's a whole parallel Greek tragedy going on behind the central story with the names symbolically tying them to their counterparts.
bentley wrote:
I am beginning to believe that the names of the characters themselves have additional significance.
Desdemona (tragic figure)as in Othello
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona_%28Othello%29
Yes, Eugenides is creating an American epic of Greek epic proportions (along the same lines of the Odyssey and Iliad); I guess in celebration of his Greek heritage and the Greek heritage of the Stephanides family.
Message Edited by bentley on 06-20-2007 02:46 PM
Re: HISTORY: 1967 Fleetwood
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06-20-2007 02:53 PM - edited 06-20-2007 02:54 PM
1967 space aged Fleetwood: Page 254
http://adcache.collectorcartraderonline.com/10/5/0
http://www.car-nection.com/yann/dbas_txt/Phocad67.
Message Edited by bentley on 06-20-2007 02:54 PM
Re: HISTORY: Mavrodapne (page 269)
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06-20-2007 03:06 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mavrodafni
http://greekproducts.com/greekproducts/mavrodaphne
Interesting recipe for mavrodaphne barbecue sauce:
http://gogreece.about.com/library/weekly/blmavrod.
Re: HISTORY: Flower Drum Song (the musical) (page 265)
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06-20-2007 03:08 PM
Re: HISTORY: Karaghiozis puppet shows (page 268)
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06-20-2007 03:13 PM
http://www.geocities.com/unimahellas/english/histo
Re: HISTORY: Prairie style/school/ar chitecture (page 254)
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06-20-2007 03:25 PM
Re: HISTORY: Judge Stephen Roth (desegregation) (page 254)
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06-20-2007 03:42 PM
Re: HISTORY: Desdemona
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06-22-2007 07:28 AM
There are so many references, though, that we could probably find parallels to many other Greek myths.
bentley wrote:
JesseBC wrote:
Definitely! There's a whole parallel Greek tragedy going on behind the central story with the names symbolically tying them to their counterparts.
bentley wrote:
I am beginning to believe that the names of the characters themselves have additional significance.
Desdemona (tragic figure)as in Othello
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona_%28Othello%29
Yes, Eugenides is creating an American epic of Greek epic proportions (along the same lines of the Odyssey and Iliad); I guess in celebration of his Greek heritage and the Greek heritage of the Stephanides family.
Message Edited by bentley on 06-20-2007 02:46 PM
Re: HISTORY: Desdemona
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06-22-2007 10:36 AM - edited 06-22-2007 10:37 AM
So, would you say Desdemona is representative of Pasiphae or would it be Tessie?
JesseBC wrote:
I remember thinking when I read Middlesex a couple years ago that it struck me as a modern re-telling of the story of the Minotaur -- the Minotaur is born half-man, half-beast, Theseus fools it by bringing cross-dressed children into the Labyrinth, the Obscure Object could be considered an Ariadne figure, Cal could even be considered the Theseus figure while Callie parallels the Minotaur, sexuality and identity being the Labyrinth itself.
There are so many references, though, that we could probably find parallels to many other Greek myths.
Message Edited by PaulH on 06-22-2007 10:37 AM
Re: HISTORY: Desdemona
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06-25-2007 09:52 PM
JesseBC wrote:
I remember thinking when I read Middlesex a couple years ago that it struck me as a modern re-telling of the story of the Minotaur -- the Minotaur is born half-man, half-beast, Theseus fools it by bringing cross-dressed children into the Labyrinth, the Obscure Object could be considered an Ariadne figure, Cal could even be considered the Theseus figure while Callie parallels the Minotaur, sexuality and identity being the Labyrinth itself.
There are so many references, though, that we could probably find parallels to many other Greek myths.
bentley wrote:
JesseBC wrote:
Definitely! There's a whole parallel Greek tragedy going on behind the central story with the names symbolically tying them to their counterparts.
bentley wrote:
I am beginning to believe that the names of the characters themselves have additional significance.
Desdemona (tragic figure)as in Othello
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desdemona_%28Othello%29
Yes, Eugenides is creating an American epic of Greek epic proportions (along the same lines of the Odyssey and Iliad); I guess in celebration of his Greek heritage and the Greek heritage of the Stephanides family.
Message Edited by bentley on 06-20-2007 02:46 PM
Jesse,
That is very interesting about the Minotaur legend (it sort of fits when Calliope is reading Luce's report about the monster part).
I am in the stages of rereading this novel. There just is so much that I missed when I started reading the book that I have gone back to the beginning and am starting anew. Making sure that I am researching all that I missed before or skimmed over.
Of course, there has been a lot written about the Greek tragedy/epic attempt by Eugenides (probably because of his Greek heritage like you stated above as well) and he really did not hide that on the second page when he alludes to Homer and muses.
There is a chapter in the book also titled The Minotaur.
Bentley
Re: HISTORY: Desdemona
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06-25-2007 09:58 PM
PaulH wrote:
That's a really interesting comparison, Jesse. So, Cal/Theseus actually kill offs the Minotaur/Callie. Really a fascinating thought.
So, would you say Desdemona is representative of Pasiphae or would it be Tessie?
JesseBC wrote:
I remember thinking when I read Middlesex a couple years ago that it struck me as a modern re-telling of the story of the Minotaur -- the Minotaur is born half-man, half-beast, Theseus fools it by bringing cross-dressed children into the Labyrinth, the Obscure Object could be considered an Ariadne figure, Cal could even be considered the Theseus figure while Callie parallels the Minotaur, sexuality and identity being the Labyrinth itself.
There are so many references, though, that we could probably find parallels to many other Greek myths.
Message Edited by PaulH on 06-22-2007 10:37 AM
If you are referring to the mother, then it would be Tessie...now I have to go over this legend...ay carumba as The Obscure Object would say. (smile)