Hephaestion website, yes or no?
Ok, first a poll. I
am thinking of starting a website for Hephaestion similar to my friend Malcolm’s
www.secondachilles.com which
focuses on Alexander. My question is
would anyone be interested in such a site?
It would feature info on Hephaestion, pictures of artifacts connected
with him, links to sources, and such.
Please comment on this below and tell me yes or no.
As far as the Hephaestion book project goes, it is coming
along slowly. Some health problems have
unfortunately kept me from working as quickly as I would like, but hopefully,
those are reaching a point where they will no longer cause delays. I am currently working on Mary Renault’s The Nature of Alexander to see how she
presents Hephaestion. I have read this
before and remember that her version is sympathetic with mine, but I wanted to
read again in a more conscious and critical manner.
My other main research interest is how clothing is used as
non-verbal communication and to establish identity. After a Skype conversation with a fellow
Alexander scholar this weekend, I have a renewed interest in exploring how
Alexander’s change in wardrobe so drastically changed his men’s opinion of him
and his “Greekness”. Look for that in
the future, and if you have any ideas, by all means, leave those in the comments
too.
Yes, a thousand times yes! Hephaestion needs a website of his own!
ReplyDeleteYes, Yes, Yes ! A Hepahestion definitively deserves to be lauded, a website site would be greatly welcome. Macolm has 'embarras du choix' to 'feed' his website on Alexander but there is such paucity of source material on Hephaestion, how will you keep the site running ?
ReplyDeleteYES YES YES
ReplyDeleteFWIW, I do actually have one: http://jeannereames.net/Hephaistion/index.html
ReplyDeleteAlthough there isn't a limit on the number of sites the internet can support. :-)