HOMER: THE FIRST TRAGEDIAN
It is a commonplace to link Homer with tragedy. Plato calls Homer the first tragedian, Aristotle praises the dramatic concentration of his plots, and pseudo-Plutarch claims that in Homer we find ‘all elements of tragedy: great and unexpected deeds, epiphanies of gods, and speeches full of thought an...
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description | It is a commonplace to link Homer with tragedy. Plato calls Homer the first tragedian, Aristotle praises the dramatic concentration of his plots, and pseudo-Plutarch claims that in Homer we find ‘all elements of tragedy: great and unexpected deeds, epiphanies of gods, and speeches full of thought and representing all kind of characters’. Likewise, modern critics write studies on Nature and Culture in the Iliad. The Tragedy of Hector, ‘Tragic Form and Feeling in the Iliad’, ‘Homeric Epic and the Tragic Moment’, and Homer and the Dual Mode of the Tragic. |
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source | Jstor Complete Legacy; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete |
subjects | Aristotle Aristotle (384-322 BC) Classical literature Deities Euripides (c 485-406 BC) Greek civilization Greek literature Homer (C 8th Century BC) Studies Writers |
title | HOMER: THE FIRST TRAGEDIAN |
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