FYSE 1154A
Euripides and Athens
Euripides and Athens
Was the tragic genius of Euripides (480?-406 BC) corrupted by the atheistic rationalism of the sophists and the philosophy of Socrates, as their Athenian contemporary, the comic poet Aristophanes, alleged? Nietzsche makes that view the basis of his attack on Socrates in The Birth of Tragedy. Or, was Euripides in fact "the most tragic of the poets," as Aristotle argued in his Poetics, written during the half century after Euripides' death in 406 BC? In this course we discuss twelve of Euripides' extant plays in the context of 5th c. BC Greek political and intellectual history, with the help of Aristotle, Nietzsche, and modern critics. 3 hrs. sem.
- Schedule
- 3:15pm-4:30pm on Tuesday, Thursday (Sep 8, 2020 to Dec 4, 2020)
- Location
- Twilight Hall 201
- Instructors
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Witkin, Marc
witkin@middlebury.edu
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