Change of Mind in Greek TragedyVandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1995 - 286 pages |
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Page 35
... meaning , even though I am aware that the literary criticism of recent decades has questioned the ability of any text to communicate a stable meaning . Such a procedure should not be decried as a " textual fetish ; " it has nothing to ...
... meaning , even though I am aware that the literary criticism of recent decades has questioned the ability of any text to communicate a stable meaning . Such a procedure should not be decried as a " textual fetish ; " it has nothing to ...
Page 36
... meaning has been concentrated in a particular text . Thus my position is that , while we should avoid extremes of the " intentional fallacy " and the " fallacy of always clearly intended meaning , " 37 we inevitably respond to the text ...
... meaning has been concentrated in a particular text . Thus my position is that , while we should avoid extremes of the " intentional fallacy " and the " fallacy of always clearly intended meaning , " 37 we inevitably respond to the text ...
Page 124
... meanings . Such a meaning is not disputed for ( ¿ § ) anatâc§αi , and it is even common in Sophocles ( two of three occurrences of the passive other than the one under discussion , namely OT 594 and El . 170 ; in the one example meaning ...
... meanings . Such a meaning is not disputed for ( ¿ § ) anatâc§αi , and it is even common in Sophocles ( two of three occurrences of the passive other than the one under discussion , namely OT 594 and El . 170 ; in the one example meaning ...
Common terms and phrases
Achilles action Admetus Aeschylus Agamemnon Ajax Alcestis Antigone Apollo argument Aristotelian Aristotle Athenian Athens audience avoid believe Blundell Burnett change of mind chapter character characterization chorus Clytemnestra conflict context Creon Creusa criticism death deception decision Deianeira Dionysus discussion divine dramatic earlier Electra Erinyes Euripidean Euripides example fact father finally focus Funke further Greek tragedy Hecuba Helen Heracles heroic temper Hippolytus intentions interpretation intrigue Ion's Iphigenia in Aulis issue Knox later Lesky lines marriage meaning Medea Menelaus metaphor monody moral motif motivation move Neoptolemus occur Odysseus Oedipus Orestes passage patterns persuasion Phaedra Philoctetes play play's plot possible prologue psychological question reluctance remains response reveal reversal rhetorical sacrifice says scene secret seems situation Sophoclean Hero Sophocles speak speech stage stasimon suggest suicide Taplin technique Tecmessa thematic theme Theseus Tiresias tradition tragic words Xuthus Yunis Zeus γὰρ δὲ καὶ κακῶν τὸ