Euripides& Bacchae

Front Cover
Brill Archive, 1984 - Drama - 200 pages
The purpose of this book is to investigate what it was Euripides intended to convey to the theatre-going public of his day when he wrote his most exciting and most gruesome play, the Bacchae. The meanings which are to be attached to the action of a play are woven by an audience, both during and after the performance, into a single dramatic experience, labelled in this book as 'audience response'.
After some introductory chapters dealing with the history of the interpretation of the Bacchae and with the theory of audience response, the main part of the book is devoted to a detailed analysis of the action of the play (chapters 4 and 5), and to a study of Dionysus in his various apects in Athenian life and in his appearances in earlier literature and on the tragic stage. The discussion of the choruses concentrates on the choruses' repeated utterances about cleverness and wisdom, which form the core of the Dionysian propaganda of the play.
The most immediate results of this new interpretation of the Bacchae are that the widely-accepted view of Pentheus as a dark puritan, a man possessed by the Dionysian qualities of his divine opponent, proves to be untenable, and that that which in the past has been rightly called the overriding theme of the play - the god's epiphany - also contains the poet's most serious and ironical discussion of divinity and of man's treatment of it. The problems of the Greek text are given full discussion, mainly in the nots and appendices. In many cases new solutions are proposed; some new problems are however added.

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Contents

The interpretation of the Bacchae
7
Dionysus Introduction to Chapters Six Seven and Eight
99
2223
105
114
131
what is wisdom?
156
Conceptual meanings
167
Bernd Seidenstickers study of the Pentheus character
176
Bacchae 13569
187
Indexes
199
Copyright

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Page 193 - Goodwin, Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb (London 1889) § 384.