Tragic Ambiguity: Anthropology, Philosophy and Sophocles' Antigone |
Contents
3 | 43 |
3 | 63 |
6 | 76 |
4 | 82 |
7 | 103 |
THE EPISODES OF SOPHOCLES ANTIGONE | 160 |
TRAGEDY AND SOME PHILOSOPHERS | 204 |
237 | |
29 | 243 |
Index locorum | 249 |
43 | 250 |
258 | |
Other editions - View all
Tragic Ambiguity: Anthropology, Philosophy and Sophocles' Antigone Th. C. W. Oudemans,A. P. M. H. Lardinois No preview available - 1987 |
Common terms and phrases
accept Aeschylus ambiguous power ANET animals Antigone Antigone and Creon Antigone's Aristotle aspects awesome banishment become Benardete RSA biguity boundaries burial chorus civilization conception conflict confronted confusion controlled ambiguity corpse cosmic cosmological categories cosmos Creon Creon and Antigone culture dangerous death Derrida Descartes destruction Dinka Dionysian Dionysus emphasized Eros Eteocles evil example exorcized fate finite Friedrich Nietzsche fundamental gods Greek Haemon harmony Hegel heroes hubris human implies insight interconnected cosmology interpretation Iocaste Ismene Ismene's Jebb justice Kamerbeek king Knox HT Labdacids law of talion Lévi-Strauss living Lycurgus maintains man's marginality meaning mortal Müller nature Nietzsche Oedipus opposition philosophy Plato point of view polis pollution Polyneices position Pritchard ANET prudence purity rational Ricœur ritual Rohdich sacrifice scapegoat Segal TC separative cosmology Sophocles stasimon structural symbolic Thebes tigone tion Tiresias tragedy tragic ambiguity transformation transgression truth unable undermining unity Vernant wild Winnington-Ingram words Zeus καὶ