Change of Mind in Greek TragedyVandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1995 - 286 psl. |
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214 psl.
... Menelaus ' argument , demands attention in a play that will contain so many surprising reversals . From the same point of view it may be disappointing that Menelaus ' attack is so witless . Indeed , this champion of heroic constancy ...
... Menelaus ' argument , demands attention in a play that will contain so many surprising reversals . From the same point of view it may be disappointing that Menelaus ' attack is so witless . Indeed , this champion of heroic constancy ...
215 psl.
... Menelaus ' attack is weak ; Agamemnon's defense is , as he says ( 400 ) , concise and clear.21 At the same time , we must acknowledge that many features of the scene work on a different level to undermine the king's apparent constancy ...
... Menelaus ' attack is weak ; Agamemnon's defense is , as he says ( 400 ) , concise and clear.21 At the same time , we must acknowledge that many features of the scene work on a different level to undermine the king's apparent constancy ...
216 psl.
... Menelaus ' versions , and there is good reason ( in his unattractiveness as a character ) for suspecting them . Menelaus also raises the issue of competence in the generalizing lines mentioned earlier . When in the prologue Agamemnon ...
... Menelaus ' versions , and there is good reason ( in his unattractiveness as a character ) for suspecting them . Menelaus also raises the issue of competence in the generalizing lines mentioned earlier . When in the prologue Agamemnon ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Achilles action Admetus Aeschylus Agamemnon Ajax Alcestis Antigone Apollo argument Aristotelian Aristotle Athenian Athens audience avoid believe Blundell Burnett change of mind chapter character characterization chorus Clytemnestra conflict context Creon Creusa criticism death deception decision Deianeira Dionysus discussion divine dramatic earlier Electra Erinyes Euripidean Euripides example fact father finally focus Funke further Greek tragedy Hecuba Helen Heracles heroic temper Hippolytus intentions interpretation intrigue Ion's Iphigenia in Aulis issue Knox later Lesky lines marriage meaning Medea Menelaus metaphor monody moral motif motivation move Neoptolemus occur Odysseus Oedipus Orestes passage patterns persuasion Phaedra Philoctetes play play's plot possible prologue psychological question reluctance remains response reveal reversal rhetorical sacrifice says scene secret seems situation Sophoclean Hero Sophocles speak speech stage stasimon suggest suicide Taplin technique Tecmessa thematic theme Theseus Tiresias tradition tragic words Xuthus Yunis Zeus γὰρ δὲ καὶ κακῶν τὸ