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Thesis

Rulers in Greek tragedy

Abstract:

This thesis discusses the depiction of rulers in Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. It aims to demonstrate the complexity and variety both of the ideas underlying the presentation of these rulers (Part One) and of how the playwrights use these ideas to depict these rulers (Part Two).

Chapter 1 presents the first detailed study of the features shared between rulers in Herodotus and tragedy. Chapter 2 provides a fresh analysis of how the idea of tyrannis was used in Athenian political and intellectual life, before examining how tragedy fits into this context. Chapter 3 examines how the depiction of tragic rulers draws on ideas current in the Athenian democracy, especially concerning leadership and obedience. Chapter 4 argues that, since many tragic plots revolve around supplication and punishment, the depiction of tragic rulers is greatly affected both by the plays’ plots and by contemporary conceptions of supplication and punishment.

After setting out a framework for discussing characters in tragedy (Introduction to Part Two), there follow case studies on five rulers. Chapter 5, on Aeschylus, argues that Eteocles (Seven Against Thebes) can best be understood in light of certain conceptions concerning the behaviour of warriors in epic, and that the presentation of Agamemnon (Agamemnon) draws on ideas about basileia current in the early fifth century. Chapter 6 presents a comparison of Sophocles’ Creon (Antigone) and Oedipus (Oedipus Tyrannus), exploring how Sophocles uses similar underlying ideas to depict them, while nevertheless presenting them differently in moral terms. Chapter 7, on Pentheus in Euripides’ Bacchae, considers how Euripides’ technique in presenting him resembles Sophocles’.

The thesis provides many novel observations about fifth-century political thought, about the relationship of tragedy to its political and intellectual context and to other genres (epic, lyric, historiography), and about the tragic playwrights’ technique in presenting characters.

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Division:
HUMS
Department:
Classics Faculty
Sub department:
Classical Languages & Lit
Role:
Author

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Role:
Supervisor


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Programme:
Joint funding from an Oxford-Cawkwell Graduate Scholarship and from the Stonehouse Foundation


Type of award:
DPhil
Level of award:
Doctoral
Awarding institution:
University of Oxford


Language:
English
Subjects:
Deposit date:
2020-07-25

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