By Jean-Pierre Vernant, Pierre Vidal-Naquet
ISBN-10: 0942299191
ISBN-13: 9780942299199
Jean Pierre-Vernant and Pierre Vidal-Naquet are leaders in a latest French classical scholarship that has produced a a gorgeous reconfiguration of Greek suggestion and literature. during this paintings, released the following as a unmarried quantity, the authors current a nerve-racking and decidedly non-classical examining of Greek tragedy that insists on its radical discontinuity with our personal outlook and with our social, aesthetic, and mental different types. initially released in French in volumes, this new single-volume version comprises revised essays from quantity one and is the 1st English translation of either volumes.Pierre Vidal-Naquet is Director of reviews and Professor of Sociology on the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris. Jean Pierre-Vernant is Professor Emeritus of Comparative learn of old Religions on the Collège de France. Janet Lloyd is a translator and author dwelling in England. allotted for sector Books.
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Additional info for Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece
Example text
The madness of Eteocles is present within him, but that does not prevent it also appearing as extraneous-and exterior to him. It is identified with the malignant power of defilement that, once engendered by ancient crimes, is transmitted from one generation to the next right down the Labdacid line. The destructive frenzy that grips the leader ofThebes is none other than the miasma that is never purified-, the Eriny'es of the race, now lodged within him as a result of the ara· or curse that Oedipus lays uEQIl-his sons.
There is no distinction between the intentfonal and the premeditated; hekon has b~th meanings. 25 As for ak5n, as Louis Gernet pointed out, it associates all kinds of ideas that, from the point of view of psychology, should be carefully distinguished right from the start. The single expression of phonos akousios, referr'hlg to the murder committed despite oneself, can mean now a total absence of guilt, now mere negligence, now a positive lack of prudence, now even a more or less fleeting impulse or the quite different case of homicide committed in legitimate self-defense.
The single expression of phonos akousios, referr'hlg to the murder committed despite oneself, can mean now a total absence of guilt, now mere negligence, now a positive lack of prudence, now even a more or less fleeting impulse or the quite different case of homicide committed in legitimate self-defense. ;:tive conditions that make an in~ividual the cause responsible for his actions. s norms for common thought. Now the law did not proceed on the basis 60 INTIMATIONS OF THE WILL IN GREEK TRAGEDY of a psychological analysis of the varying degrees of the responsibility of the agent.
Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece by Jean-Pierre Vernant, Pierre Vidal-Naquet
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