Ariadne's LivesBy taking an unconventional view of the well-known myth of Theseus, Ariadne, and the Minotaur on Crete, Ariadne's Lives breaks new ground and will cause some controversy. None of the much-heralded myth study coming out of French and American structuralism and psychoanalysis has focused attention on Ariadne's story. Indeed, relatively little work has been done on the Cretan myth cycle as a whole, a mixture of heroic Greek legend and savage, pre-Greek elements generally considered to be antithetical to evolved literary languages. As a result, although Ariadne has been extremely important in Western art from the time of ancient Greece through the nineteenth century, she is rarely included in studies of Greek myth. Like many other Eastern goddesses, Ariadne fell victim to the collision between pre-Greek and Greek cultures and virtually disappeared. |
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Page 54
... death by drowning , of course , results in neither seasonal death nor Naxian transfiguration nor redemption for Brook Farm's spuri- ous socialism . Presentiments of approaching evil amid the lush October harvest instead conclude with a ...
... death by drowning , of course , results in neither seasonal death nor Naxian transfiguration nor redemption for Brook Farm's spuri- ous socialism . Presentiments of approaching evil amid the lush October harvest instead conclude with a ...
Page 120
... death was the salient feature in Ariadne's cult , as spiritual death reigned over Christiana , so Hedda's death redefines itself in the Dionysiac context as sacrifice to the return of creativity . These mythic intentions unify past and ...
... death was the salient feature in Ariadne's cult , as spiritual death reigned over Christiana , so Hedda's death redefines itself in the Dionysiac context as sacrifice to the return of creativity . These mythic intentions unify past and ...
Page 158
... death " ; the instincts of self - preservation " assure that the organism shall follow its own path to death . ” Yet culture , the great enter- prise of making life prevail against death , as Freud later thought , employs internalized ...
... death " ; the instincts of self - preservation " assure that the organism shall follow its own path to death . ” Yet culture , the great enter- prise of making life prevail against death , as Freud later thought , employs internalized ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 7 |
Plain Janes Revolution | 26 |
Hawthorne the Romancer | 39 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action appears archetypal Ariadne Ariadne's Artemis becomes body brother called character Clare consciousness creativity Cretan criticism culture cycle Daedalus daughter death desire differently Dionysiac Dionysos discussion divine doubles Edna Edna's effect Eliot emotional Eros experience expression father feminine figure final force function goddess gothic Greek Hardy Hardy's Hawthorne Hawthorne's Hedda hero heroic Hester human Ibsen imagination impulses instance ironic Jane kills Knossos labyrinth language later Lessing literary literature lovers Maggie Maggie's maid marriage Martha meaning metaphors mind moral mother myth mythic mythology nature Naxos notes novel object once origins parallel passion pattern play principle provides psychological reality refer relation remains represents resembles rhetorical romance sacred says scene sense sexual social spirit structure suggests symbolic Tess theory Theseus tion tragedy transformation University Press vision woman women York
References to this book
Comparative Criticism: Volume 18, Spaces: Cities, Gardens and Wildernesses E. S. Shaffer Limited preview - 1996 |