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Euripides

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Journal Article
New German Critique (2024) 51 (3 (153)): 193–215.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Jonas Heller This article explores the political implications of the figure of Medea by analyzing the affinity between violence and nonviolence in her actions. A new reading of two versions of the mythical material—the apparently violent Medea in Euripides’s tragedy, and the apparently nonviolent...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2006) 33 (2 (98)): 1–14.
Published: 01 August 2006
... of the dead, the underground or sewers, cellars or even (more profanely) underground car parks, as in, for example, “the dark gaze of Euripides into the underground garages of history.”8 3. Ibid., 73. 4. Ibid., 84. 5. Ibid., 74. 6. Ibid., 80–81. 7. See Sven-Thore Kramm, “Gräber im...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2015) 42 (2 (125)): 65–80.
Published: 01 August 2015
... University seminar on late style in 1995. Further- more, although Said did not call attention to this fact, “nearly all the authors on the syllabus had been exiled or estranged from their country of origin” (Sopho- cles, Euripides, Henrik Ibsen, Adorno, Thomas Mann, C. P. Cavafy, Gerard Manley Hopkins...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2008) 35 (2 (104)): 33–53.
Published: 01 August 2008
... to capitalist moder- nity; on the contrary, its primal exemplar is Homer’s Odyssey. Analogous to Nietzsche’s critique of Euripides, Adorno sees the Odyssey as using myth to the end of demythologizing culture in general, that is, to the end of Enlighten- 13. Tom Huhn brings this neglect to its...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2022) 49 (2 (146)): 49–75.
Published: 01 August 2022
... and Rosenzweig’s sources regarding Greek drama and the role of the tragic hero, see Wogenstein, Horizonte der Moderne , 113–26 . 21. Rosenzweig recognizes that there is more speaking in the late tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides, but he emphasizes that these “late” heroes do not “speak” with each other...