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Euripides and the Tragic Tradition.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Michelini, Anne Norris
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Madison : University of Wisconsin Press, 2014.
Colección:Wisconsin studies in classics.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Preface; A Note about References; Part I: Toward Interpretation; Chapter 1: A History of Euripidean Interpretation; I. Euripides Dethroned and Rehabilitated: The First Stage; A. Classicism and the Nineteenth-Century View of Euripides; B. The First Scholarly Criticism; II. The Beginnings of Modern Euripidean Criticism: New Trends and Old Methods; A. Structural Studies and the Traditional View of Euripides; B. English-Speaking Scholars: Kitto and After; C. The Historicist School; III. The More Recent Work; A. Structural Criticism; B. New Perspectives; C. Euripides Rehabilitated.
  • D. The Last Decade: A Step Forward and a Step BackE. Conclusions; Chapter 2: Euripides and His Tradition; Chapter 3: Euripides and His Audience: The Tactics of Shock; Chapter 4: Formalism in the Style of Euripidean Drama; Part II: Four Plays; Chapter 6: Hekabe: The Aesthetic of the Aischron; I. Structure; II. Nature and Nurture; III. Rhetoric and Persuasion; IV. Polyxene's Death Scene; V. Revenge and Complementarity; VI. Some Central Themes; Chapter 7: Elektra: The "Low" Style; I. Anti-traditional Aspects; A. Realism and Comic Tone; B. The Elektra of Sophokles.
  • C. The Personality of the Euripidean ElektraD. The Role of Elektra's Husband; E. The Tokens; II. Elektra and Orestes; A. The Meeting; B. Moral Ambiguity; C. Aigisthos; D. Klytaimestra; E. The Exodos; F. Male and Female; Chapter 8: Herakles: Tragedy in Paradox; I. Some Critical Problems; II. The Design of the First Half ; A. Archaizing Style in Dialogue and Lyric; B. Plot Structure; III. Herakles as Modern Hero; A. Herakles the Bowman; B. Masculine Focus and the Role of Megara; C. Domestic Drama; IV. Human Strength and Human Weakness; A. Herakles' Dual Parentage; B. Theseus as Comforter.
  • C. Heroism in ParadoxV. The Gods; A. The Problem of Divine Agency; B. The Fiction Erases Itself; Chapter 9: Hippolytos: An Exceptional Play; I. Tragic Morality; A. The Manipulation of "Dramatic Effect"; I. Tragic Morality; A. The Manipulation of "Dramatic Effect"; B. The Spoudaion and Human Feeling (To Philanthropon); II. The Second Hippolytos; A. Revision; B. Êthos; III. Socratic Ideology; A. Phaidra's Speech; B. Hippolytos as Socratic Hero; IV. The Spoudaion in Hippolytos; A. Aristocratic Norms; B. The Role of the Gods: Hippolytos and Other Plays; Appendix A: Melodrama.
  • Appendix B: Albin Lesky and AlkestisAppendix C: Lyrics in Hekabe; Appendix D: Dating, Influence, and Literary Analysis; Reference List; Index.