Classics and the Western Canon discussion
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The Library of Greek Mythology
The Library of Greek Mythology
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Schedule - The Library of Greek Mythology
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The book divisions (I-III, and Epitome) are used in editions of the Greek text, and standard, and there are what amount to continuous paragraph numbering for more precise references. But the topical subdivisions are not marked and labelled, and it is up to the translators to let the reader know when the subject has changed.Hard's breakdown is fairly transparent. I think that he offers far and away the best guide to the contents in any of the four translations I've seen. But if someone actually needs it, I'm prepared to cross-reference Hard's divisions to either of two other translations (there are two more that I don't currently have).
The more recent is R. Scott Smith and Stephen M. Trzaskoma, "Apollodorus' Library and Hyginus' Fabulae: Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology." I'm using its Kindle edition -- from which I may be able to get approximate page numbers on at least one of my platforms.
The second is Frazer's old (1920s) Loeb Classical Library edition, with facing Greek text, using either page numbers (from pdfs), or section numbers, which are also found in the Delphi Classics Kindle edition. (The sections there are most easily followed at the end of the of Delphi arrangement, where paragraphs of Greek text alternate with the English translation, making the breaks easier to spot than as numbers embedded in the text, so I'd prefer to go with the section numbers only.)
The reading schedule is the same but has been updated with section headings to help those with different editions.
David wrote: "30-Sep Book I: 1. TheogonyOuranos, Ge, and the birth of the Titans..."
The description should include the rise of Zeus and the Olympians, the children of Zeus, and the revolt of Typhon (an Earth-born monster).
Ian wrote: "The description should include the rise of Zeus and the Olympians, the children of Zeus, and the revolt of T..."The first week includes those sections, but as noted above, I only listed the first section heading to avoid posting the full TOC which makes for an awkwardly large reading schedule.
So for the first week we will discuss everyting from the opening chapter up to but not including "Book I: 2. The Deucalionids: Prometheus and early man


I was torn between 6 or 7 weeks and this 11 week schedule. I went with 11 weeks because while the stories are short, there are many of them to discuss. Also the Dec 15 end date puts us a little closer to the Holidays.
Note: Updated 9/20 with section headings.