Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile
Baylor Great Texts

@greattexts

Great Texts Program, Honors College,
Baylor University

ID: 2169064784

linkhttp://www.baylor.edu/great_texts/ calendar_today01-11-2013 20:47:35

1,1K Tweet

537 Followers

302 Following

Sarah-Jane (SJ) Murray (@sj_murray) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What is the Medieval French Ovide? Well, we spent a decade translating it, because we believe it's a "lost book" that changed and shaped the world. Quite possibly, you might think of it as the Divine Comedy of France. Now, learn about how it all began -- and then dig into the

Adrian Tudor (@adriantudordr) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is splendid! How did medieval Christians make the works of pre-Christian, pagan writers ("the ancients") into Christian teachings? How could pagans like Aristotle & Ovid write Christian truths? Sarah-Jane (SJ) Murray and a team at Baylor University explain in a terrific short film...

Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On this day in the history of great texts, Elizabeth Bowen (1899), Gwendolyn Brooks (1917), and Orhan Pamuk (1952) were born, and Friedrich Hölderlin (1843) and E.M. Forster (1970) died.

Zena Hitz (@zenahitz) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Common mistake: People think that the great books are packed with familiar cliches, whereas the great books are always startling, whether it's startling familiarity or startling weirdness.

Thomas M. Ward (@prof_tom_ward) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Boethius died 1500 years ago this October. His Consolation of Philosophy was one of the most widely read books in Europe for over a thousand years. If you’ve never read it, make this the year you do!

Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Happy #Bloomsday! OTD in 1904 James Joyce began his relationship with Nora Barnacle and later commemorated it as the day his character Leopold Bloom wandered throughout Dublin in the 1922 novel *Ulysses*

Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

OTD in 1716, Alexander Pope published the first volume of his translation of the Iliad. The esteemed classical scholar Richard Bentley said, “It is a very pretty poem, Mr. Pope, but you must not call it Homer.” Pope would get his revenge in The Dunciad.

Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

OTD in 1313, Giovanni Boccaccio, author of The Decameron and one of the “Three Crowns” of Italian literature (with Dante and Petrarch), was born.

Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Happy Juneteenth! #OTD in the history of great texts, Blaise Pascal (1623) and Salman Rushdie (1947) were born, and J.M. Barrie (1937) and William Golding (1993) died.

Sarah-Jane (SJ) Murray (@sj_murray) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What is creativity? In today’s #GreatThought, Tolkien reminds us that our creativity comes not from ourselves, but is instead an invitation to step into our roles as “sub-creators.”

Baylor Great Texts (@greattexts) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It’s Another Brave New World Don’t miss this excellent essay from our Baylor Honors College colleague Darin Davis! currentpub.com/2024/11/13/its…