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1. Euripides’s Poetic Game and Law of Composition
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- 1. Euripides’s Poetic Game and Law of Composition 1
- 2. Anthropomorphism 4
- 3. The Protection of the Self and the Role of Sophia 14
- 4. Some Connotations of Sophia 20
- 5. Polyneices’s Truth 30
- 6. Hecuba’s Rhetoric 32
- 7. Eros in Euripides’s Poetics: Sex as the Cause of the Trojan War 34
- 8. The Lewd Gaze of the Eye 43
- 9. The Power of Love: Who Is Aphrodite? 46
- 10. Phaedra 49
- 11. Hermione: The Andromache 61
- 12. Female Victims of War: The Troades 71
- 13. The Survival in Poetry 79
- 14. Figures of Metalepsis: The Invention of “Literature” 82
- 15. The Failure of Politics in Euripides’s Poetics: Politics in the Suppliant Women 95
- 16. Political Philosophy: A Universal Program of Peace and Progress 103
- 17. How to Deliberate a War 112
- 18. Democracy and Monarchy 121
- 19. The Battle 125
- 20. The Rescue of the Corpses 128
- 21. Return to Arms 138
- 22. The Polis’s Loss of Control and Authority 142
- 23. The Bacchants’ Gospel and the Greek City 154
- 24. Pentheus and Teiresias 158
- 25. Dionysus’s Revenge: First Round 163
- 26. Revenge Prepares Its Murderous Weapon 169
- 27. Initiation and Sacrifice 176
- 28. Victory and Defeat 185
- 29. Euripides’s Poetry 191
- Bibliography 205
- Subject Index 217
- Index Locorum 225
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- 1. Euripides’s Poetic Game and Law of Composition 1
- 2. Anthropomorphism 4
- 3. The Protection of the Self and the Role of Sophia 14
- 4. Some Connotations of Sophia 20
- 5. Polyneices’s Truth 30
- 6. Hecuba’s Rhetoric 32
- 7. Eros in Euripides’s Poetics: Sex as the Cause of the Trojan War 34
- 8. The Lewd Gaze of the Eye 43
- 9. The Power of Love: Who Is Aphrodite? 46
- 10. Phaedra 49
- 11. Hermione: The Andromache 61
- 12. Female Victims of War: The Troades 71
- 13. The Survival in Poetry 79
- 14. Figures of Metalepsis: The Invention of “Literature” 82
- 15. The Failure of Politics in Euripides’s Poetics: Politics in the Suppliant Women 95
- 16. Political Philosophy: A Universal Program of Peace and Progress 103
- 17. How to Deliberate a War 112
- 18. Democracy and Monarchy 121
- 19. The Battle 125
- 20. The Rescue of the Corpses 128
- 21. Return to Arms 138
- 22. The Polis’s Loss of Control and Authority 142
- 23. The Bacchants’ Gospel and the Greek City 154
- 24. Pentheus and Teiresias 158
- 25. Dionysus’s Revenge: First Round 163
- 26. Revenge Prepares Its Murderous Weapon 169
- 27. Initiation and Sacrifice 176
- 28. Victory and Defeat 185
- 29. Euripides’s Poetry 191
- Bibliography 205
- Subject Index 217
- Index Locorum 225