Eva Brann
Autor von Homeric Moments: Clues to Delight in Reading the Odyssey and the Iliad
Über den Autor
Eva Brann is a member of the senior faculty at St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland, where she has taught for more than sixty years. She holds degrees from Brooklyn College and Yale University and is a recipient of the National Humanities Medal. Feigning is her thirteenth book from Paul Dry mehr anzeigen Books. Her other books include Pursuits of Happiness, Iron Filings or Scribblings, How to Constitute a World, Doublethink / Doubletalk, Then Now, Un-Willing, The Logos of Heraclitus, Feeling Our Feelings, Homage to Americans, Open Secrets / Inward Prospects, The Music of the Republic, and Homeric Moments. weniger anzeigen
Werke von Eva Brann
The Music of the Republic: Essays on Socrates' Conversations and Plato's Writings (2004) 67 Exemplare
Homage to Americans: Mile-High Meditations, Close Readings, and Time-Spanning Speculations (2010) 10 Exemplare
Late Geometric and Protoattic Pottery, Mid 8th to Late 7th Century B. C. - The Athenian Agora - Volume VIII (Results of… (1962) 2 Exemplare
Four essays on Plato's Republic 1 Exemplar
Liberated Characters 1 Exemplar
A College Unique and Universal 1 Exemplar
A Reading of the Gettysburg Address 1 Exemplar
Zugehörige Werke
A Truth Universally Acknowledged: 33 Great Writers on Why We Read Jane Austen (2009) — Mitwirkender — 366 Exemplare
Greek Mathematical Thought and the Origin of Algebra (1968) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben — 146 Exemplare
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Wissenswertes
- Gebräuchlichste Namensform
- Brann, Eva
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Brann, Eva T. H.
- Geburtstag
- 1929
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- Deutschlan (Geburt)
USA (Einbürgerung) - Geburtsort
- Berlin, Deutschland
- Wohnorte
- Annapolis, Maryland, USA
- Ausbildung
- Yale University (PhD, MA)
Brooklyn College (BA) - Berufe
- Tutor
Professor
Historiker
Philosoph - Beziehungen
- Heidegger, Martin (Lehrer)
Klein, Jacob (Kollege) - Organisationen
- St. John's College
- Preise und Auszeichnungen
- National Humanities Medal (2005)
- Kurzbiographie
- Eva Brann was born to a German-Jewish family in Berlin. She emigrated in 1941 to the USA and received her B.A. from Brooklyn College in 1950, her M.A. in classics from Yale University in 1951, and her Ph.D. in archaeology from Yale in 1956. She also holds an Honorary Doctorate from Middlebury College. Vermont.
She obtained a faculty position at St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland, in 1957, and in her early years there was very close to her colleague, the philosopher Jacob Klein. After Prof. Klein's death, Prof. Brann increasingly assumed his role as the defining figure of St. John's College and the Great Books program.
She is the longest-serving member of the faculty and previously served as dean of the college.
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She goes wrong when she counter-intuitively argues that Heraclitus is incorrectly read as a "flux" philosopher, and would be better paired with his contemporary Parmenides, who famously claimed that "All is one." While I wouldn't disagree that Heraclitus stands in relation (per the Logos) to Parmenides' declaration, I do not think the One of Parmenides is the same One that Heraclitus speaks of. Instead of denying the flux (change, agonism, strife) that is at the core of Heraclitus' fragments, she could have pushed Hegel's conclusions further, and found Heraclitus' true descendant in Adorno and his Negative Dialectics, which does not seek to reconcile opposites into an untrue unity.… (mehr)