[First listed in AWOL 6 December 2012, updates 30 September 2017]
Society for the Oral Reading of Greek and Latin Literature (SORGLL)
It is generally
acknowledged that the literature of the Greeks and Romans is among the
most beautiful and powerful expressions of the human mind. It is also
generally known that this body of literature was created with the
intention of being
orally performed and aurally experienced by a group of listeners,
large or small, and was not intended to be read silently with the eyes
alone. The element of sound is therefore fundamental to a full
esthetic experience and understanding of Greek and Latin literature.
And yet, the traditional method of teaching Greek and Latin ignores or
neglects the sounds of these languages, as if they were of
little or no importance, thus depriving students of the basic literary
reward of hearing and reproducing beautiful poetry. It is as if
students were to study Mozart solely from musical scores and not be
given the opportunity of hearing his music. It is the aim or
our Society to encourage students and teachers to listen to and to
reproduce the sounds of Greek and Latin literature, thereby enriching
the whole study process of these languages. Fortunately, linguistic
and metrical research of the last century now permits us to acquire a
close approximation of the pronunciation of classical Greek and Latin,
a result which we call the "restored pronunciation" (basic
bibliography below). Our Society feels that it is our professional
duty to use the results of this research in our teaching of Greek and
Latin as a means for achieving maximum authenticity and esthetic
pleasure in the reading of Greek and Latin literary works. As a means
toward this end, our Society presents programs oriented to the oral
performance of Classical literature at the annual APA meetings, we
publish a newsletter, we have established this website to
present pertinent information, audio clips, queries and discussion,
while several members or our Society regularly give recitals of Greek
and Latin literature in schools, colleges and universities throughout
the country.
We cordially invite you to join the Society for the Oral Reading of
Greek and Latin Literature and to share our experience in hearing and
reproducing the true sounds of Homer, Vergil, and the other Classical
authors.
Home
Catullus 5
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Robert P. Sonkowsky, University of Minnesota.
-
- Cicero, In Catilinam I.1-3
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Robert P. Sonkowsky, University of Minnesota.
-
- Horace, Odes 1.22
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Robert P. Sonkowsky, University of Minnesota.
-
- Juvenal, Satire I.1-30
- Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Mark Miner, University of Georgia.
-
- Martial, Epigrams
I.96, V.41, X.30
- Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Wakefield Foster, University of Missouri.
-
- Ovid, Metamorphoses
8.183-235
- Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Seneca, Thyestes
766-804
- Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Katharina Volk, Columbia University.
Statius, Thebaid I. 46-87
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Terence, Eunuch 232-264
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Matthew Dillon, Loyola University.
-
- Vergil, Aeneid, Book 1, 1-49
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Robert P. Sonkowsky, University of Minnesota.
-
- Vergil, Aeneid, Book 4, 296-396
-
Read in the restored pronunciation of classical Latin
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
- Alkman 58
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Arkhilokhos 67
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Aristophanes,
Birds 227-262
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Demosthenes,
On the Crown 199-208
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Euripides,
Trojan Women 740-779
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Homer, Iliad, Book 1, lines 1-52
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Menander, Dyskolos, lines 711-747
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Mark Miner, University of Georgia.
-
- Pindar, Olympian 1.1-58
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by William Mullen, Bard College.
-
- Sappho 1
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York.
-
- Sophokles, Elektra 1126-1170
- read in the restored pronunciation of classical Greek
by Rachel Kitzinger, Vassar College.
-
And see also
Aural Akkadian: Babylonian and Assyrian Poetry and Literature: An Archive of Recordings