
Modern Readers Find It Hard To Come To Terms With The Gods In Euripides' Dramas. Readers Try To Dismiss Them As A Literary Convention. Stage Productions Leave Them Out, Especially In The Cases When They Appear Ex Machina. Instead, They Place Disproportionate Emphasis On The Harsh Criticisms Of The Gods Uttered By Some Of The Characters In The Dramas, And Have Sought To Interpret Euripides Ironically, Viewing His Portrayal Of The Cruel And Capricious Gods As A Means Of Drawing Attention To The Deficiencies Of Ancient Greek Religion. In Their View Euripides' Dramas Seek To Question The Nature And Sometimes Even The Very Existence Of Traditional Greek Gods. In Euripides And The Gods, Classicist Mary Lefkowitz Sets Out To Show That The Tragedian Is Not Undermining Ancient Religion, But Rather Describing With A Brutal Realism What The Gods Are Like, Impressing Upon His Mortal Audience The Limitations Of Human Understanding. Writing The First Extended Treatment Of These Issues For A General Audience, Lefkowitz Provides A Book That Deals With All Of Euripides' Dramas, And Argues For A More Tolerant And Nuanced Understanding Of Ancient Greek Religion. Euripides, Like Homer, Is Making A Statement About The Nature Of The World And Human Life, Terrifying But Accurate. She Explains How The Idea That Euripides Was An Atheist Derives From Ancient Biographies That Drew Their Evidence From Comic Poets, And Shows Why The Doubts About The Gods Expressed By His Characters Must Be Understood In Their Dramatic Context. Euripides And The Gods Offers A Compelling Invitation To Return To The Dramatic Masterpieces Of Euripides With Fresh Eyes.
Does Euripides use his dramas to undermine traditional Greek religion, or does he present a realistic, albeit terrifying, depiction of divine power? Mary Lefkowitz, a distinguished classicist, challenges the prevailing modern tendency to interpret Euripides as an ironic critic or closet atheist. By examining the historical context of ancient biographies and the dramatic function of divine characters, she argues that Euripides portrays the gods with a brutal realism intended to highlight the inherent limitations of human understanding.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of classics value this work for its corrective approach to long-standing interpretive biases regarding Euripidean theology. Readers frequently note that the prose is accessible to a general audience while maintaining the rigor expected of professional classical scholarship.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190463104
ISBN-13:
9780190463106
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