Great Works I Spring 2017
Menu
  • Home
  • Syllabus
  • Schedule
  • Readings
    • Wideman, “Stories”
    • Enuma Elish
    • “Hymn to the Aten”
    • Hesiod, Theogony
    • Popol Vuh
    • Antigone
      • Antigone 1
      • Antigone 2
      • Antigone 3
      • Antigone 4
      • Antigone 5
    • Narcissus and Echo
    • Dali, Metamorphosis of Narcissus
    • Thousand and One Nights
    • “Orientalism Reconsidered”
    • “Concept of Rasa”
    • Tang Poetry – Wang Wei
    • Tang Poetry – Li Bo
    • Tang Poetry – Du Fu
  • Assignments
    • Grading Scale for Online Work
    • Close Reading I
    • Sample Close Reading Essays
    • Close Reading II
    • Final Project Guidelines
  • Scholarly Editions
  • Resources
  • How To
A Blogs@Baruch Site
Browse: Home » t.curran

GROUP 1

March 30, 2017 · by t.curran · in peer review close reading II

Orientalism and Aladdin           Throughout various translations of Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp, one can find changes in each version that were applied to appeal to a specific audience. Orientalism effects each translation of this story…

The Three Apple’s– Payne and Scott

March 14, 2017 · by t.curran · in Uncategorized

This is the paragraph from Payne’s version: “About mid-day a great ugly black slave came into the bazaar, having in his hand one of the three apples, with which he was playing; so I called to him and said, “Prithee,…

frame tale

March 10, 2017 · by t.curran · in online work week 6

Frame tales or Frame stories, can be dated back to ancient Egypt and India. A frame tale is a short story that is set within a bigger story. In literature it can be seen when the main character tells stories…

Antigone questions

March 2, 2017 · by t.curran · in online work week 5

3. Antigone believes that she must bury Polynices despite Creons orders because if she doesn’t, she will be going against what she believes to be morally correct. This can be seen in Antigone 1 when she is talking to Ismene…

Tomi Lahren’s Rhetoric

February 17, 2017 · by t.curran · in Online Work Week 3, Plato and Socrates

Popol Vuh Analysis

February 10, 2017 · by t.curran · in creation myths, maya civilization, online work week 2

“And the earth was formed first, the mountain-plain. The channels of water were separated; their branches wound their ways among the mountains. The waters were divided when the great mountains appeared.” “Talk, speak out. Don’t moan, don’t cry out. Please…

How to make Toni-Ann

February 3, 2017 · by t.curran · in recipe week 1

Ingredients:   3 cups of composing music 1 cup of sleep deprived EMT 1 gallon of sarcasm ¼ cup of DANK MEMES  ½ cup of humor 1 tablespoon of kindness 2 teaspoons of compassion How to cook:   Pre-heat the…

Categories

  • Antigone
  • art selfie
  • creation myths
  • greece
  • instructor's note
  • maya civilization
  • mesopotamia
  • online work week 2
  • Online Work Week 3
  • online work week 5
  • online work week 6
  • peer review close reading II
  • Plato and Socrates
  • recipe week 1
  • sakuntala
  • Tang Poetry
  • thousand and one nights
  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • Wang Wei- Man of Many Trades
  • Grand Canal and Wang Wei’s paintings
  • Tang Poetry
  • Li Bo
  • Du Fu Background Info

Recent Comments

  • rt156011 on Group 2: Thousand and One Nights and Orientalism
  • r.castillo on Thousand and One nights (Group 1)
  • n.sharif on Group 5 – Sakuntala kama & dharma
  • n.sharif on Group 5 – Sakuntala
  • n.sharif on Group 5 – Sakuntala

Tags

#Aladdin #magiclamp aladdin Alf Layla Wa-Layla Ali Baba Alibaba Antigone antoine galland arab arabian nights A Thousand and One Nights burton Creon dharma folk tales greece Hesiod hinduism intro kalidasa kama lang Mayan mille et une nuites Muses oedipus one thousand and one nights Open Sesame payne Persuasion Popol Vuh qur'an rasa recipe rhetoric sakuntala scott Socrates The Arabian Nights' Entertainments Theogony thousand and one nights thousand one nights three apples translation translations Zeus

Copyright © 2025 Great Works I Spring 2017

Powered by WordPress and Origin