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Gender and the City in Euripides' Political Plays
Gender and the City in Euripides' Political Plays
★★★★★
★★★★★
Regular price
€244.90
A01=Daniel Mendelsohn
Author_Daniel Mendelsohn
Category=DSBB
Category=DSG
Category=JBSD
Category=JBSF
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Product details
- ISBN 9780199249565
- Weight: 441g
- Dimensions: 144 x 224mm
- Publication Date: 31 Oct 2002
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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This book is the first book-length study of Euripides' so-called 'political plays (Children of Herakles and Suppliant Women) to appear in half a century. Still disdained as the anomalously patriotic or propagandistic' works of a playwright elsewhere famous for his subversive, ironic artistic ethos, the two works in question, notorious for their uncomfortable juxtaposition of political speeches and scenes of extreme feminine emotion, continue to be dismissed by scholars of tragedy as artistic failures unworthy of the author of Medea, Hippolytus, and Bacchae. The present study makes use of recent insights into classical Greek conceptions of gender (in real life and on stage) and Athenian notions of civic identity to demonstrate that the political plays are, in fact, intellectually subtle and structurally coherent exercises in political theorizing - works that use complex interactions between female and male characters to explore the advantages, and costs, of being a member of the polis.
Daniel Mendelsohn, a writer and critic living in New York, is a Lecturer in the Department of Classics at Princeton University
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