The Mourning Voice: An Essay on Greek Tragedy

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Cornell University Press, 2002 - 127 páginas

In The Mourning Voice, Nicole Loraux presents a radical challenge to what has become the dominant view of tragedy in recent years: that tragedy is primarily a civic phenomenon, infused with Athenian political ideology, which envisions its spectators first and foremost as citizens, members of the political collective. Instead, Loraux maintains, the spectator addressed by tragedy is the individual defined primarily in terms of his or her humanity, rather than in terms of affiliation with a political group. The plays, she says, involve the spectators in the emotional expressiveness of tragic suffering, thereby creating a theatrical identity. Aroused by the experience of suffering, the audience is reminded that it is witnessing a theatrical representation of the instability of the human condition--a state that Loraux asserts tragedy is uniquely suited to convey.

 

Conteúdo

The Theater of Dionysus Is Not in the Agora
14
Tragedy and the Antipolitical
26
The Dilemma of the Self and the Other in Tragedy
42
Song without Lyre
54
Dionysus Apollo
66
From Citizen to Spectator
81
Choral Catharsis
90
Acknowledgments
121
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Sobre o autor (2002)

The late Nicole Loraux was the author of many books. Elizabeth Trapnell Rawlings is an independent translator whose most recent translations appear in Greek Thought: A Guide to Classical Knowledge, edited by Jacques Brunschwig and Geoffrey E. R. Lloyd. Pietro Pucci is Goldwin Smith Professor of Classics at Cornell University and the author of many books.

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