Format:
1 Online-Ressource
Edition:
1st ed
ISBN:
9781472593177
Content:
Heracles and Athenian Propaganda examines how Greece's most important hero was appropriated and portrayed by Athens in religion, politics, architecture and literature, with a detailed study of Euripides' Heracles in relation to this interplay between the hero and the city's ideology. Though Athens needed a hero of Hellenic stature, Heracles was a deeply problematic figure: a violent hero of ancient epic, with an aristocratic nature and a murderous temper, who did not naturally fit into the new ideals of democratic society at Athens. Examining how Euripides' play fits within the space of the polis and its political ideology, Sofia Frade asks specific questions of tragedy and politics: how does Euripides' tragic drama of grief, insanity and murder reconcile this hero to a palatable, patriotic ideal? How does the tragic hero relate to his own representations and his cult within the polis? In a city so marked by iconographic propaganda, how did the imagery influence the audience? By looking at the play's larger contexts literary, civic, political, religious and ideological new readings are offered to the most problematic elements of the play, including the question of its unity, the nature of the hero's madness and the role of the gods
Note:
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Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781350370678
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781472505590
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781472510433
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781472511157
Language:
English
DOI:
10.5040/9781472593177
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