Euripides and Alcestis: Speculations, Simulations, and Stories of Love in the Athenian CultureUniversity Press of America, 1998 - 113 pages Euripides and Alcestis demonstrates the inherent presence of indeterminacy in Euripides' play, Alcestis. The author uses about eighty of the scholarly attempts to establish a determinate meaning of the play to exhibit the difficulty and lack of success in previous attempts at interpretation. She recognizes that the meaning of the play is surrounded by ambiguity and indeterminacy and provides an interpretation based on this knowledge. As an interpretation, the author focuses on Admetus' desire in relation to Alcestis' statue and his nature as a fifth century Athenian man while exposing Alcestis as a nonidentity. She also analyzes the issues of representation and spectatorship, showing that the theatrical performance is constructed in order to function as vehicles for the satisfaction of a dominant position-that of Admetus and the spectator of the performance. |
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Page 39
... Women are not only absent from the stage , but also from 5th - century Athenian public life . They have no legal status in the Athenian democracy except as daughters or wives of citizens : there is no female equivalent for the male noun ...
... Women are not only absent from the stage , but also from 5th - century Athenian public life . They have no legal status in the Athenian democracy except as daughters or wives of citizens : there is no female equivalent for the male noun ...
Page 42
... women , 5th - century Athenian men are free to form friendships among them during the wars and in the gymnasiums and philosophical schools of the city . Marriage to a woman fulfills for a man part of his political and civic duties ; it ...
... women , 5th - century Athenian men are free to form friendships among them during the wars and in the gymnasiums and philosophical schools of the city . Marriage to a woman fulfills for a man part of his political and civic duties ; it ...
Page 102
... Women . " Mnemosyne 35 ( 1982 ) : 115-135 . Goddesses , Whores , Wives , and Slaves . New York : Schocken Books , 1975 . Poole , Adrian . Tragedy . Shakespeare and the Greek Example . Oxford : Basil Blackwell , 1987 . Powell , Anton ...
... Women . " Mnemosyne 35 ( 1982 ) : 115-135 . Goddesses , Whores , Wives , and Slaves . New York : Schocken Books , 1975 . Poole , Adrian . Tragedy . Shakespeare and the Greek Example . Oxford : Basil Blackwell , 1987 . Powell , Anton ...
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