Sons of the Gods, Children of Earth: Ideology and Literary Form in Ancient Greece |
Contents
Marxism and the Classics | 1 |
How Conservative Is the Iliad? | 43 |
Ambivalence and Identity in the Odyssey | 92 |
Copyright | |
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Achilles Aeschylus Agamemnon Aigisthos allusion ambiguity analysis anthropological Archaic aretē argues argument aristocratic associated Athenian Athens Atreidai audience century character chorus cited contemporary context culture democratic Democritos demos dialogue discourse divine dominant dramatic earlier echoes economic elements emerges emphasis Erinyes evokes exploration father female Finley focus Frankfurt School function fundamental gods Greek Guthrie HGP Herakles hermeneutic hero Herodotus heroic Hesiod historical historicizing Homer hoplite human ideological Iliad implies inherited excellence insists Jameson Klytemnestra male Marx Marx's Marxist MECW metaphor moral myth narrative nature negation Neoptolemos noted Odysseus offers oligarchs Oresteia Orestes parallel Philoktetes phusis Pindar Plato play poem poet poet's polis political Protagoras Pythian reality relation relevant Republic role ruling seems sense sexual social society Sokrates Sophists Sophokles specific status stress structure struggle suggests suitors survival symbolic tion traditional trilogy utopian victory vision wealth whole women Xenophanes Zeus