Fear is the coessential ingredient of tragedy, and tragedy, since Aristotle, deals with the stories of those who are above us – heroes, kings, and tyrants. Fear, together with pity, is what we, as spectators, are to experience in order to achieve the catharsis of such emotions. Thus, the tragic experience is first and foremost an experience of fear at different levels: on stage, where the action displays the people’s fear of the tyrant and the tyrant’s own fear of them, and in the interplay between stage and audience, where we all identify with those who fear the tyrant, but also with the tyrant who in turn fears them. This introduction to part 1 of this special issue of Comparative Drama entitled 'The Tyrant's Fear' (part 2 52.1 Spring 201...
Tyranny (tyrannis) is a name given to a type of Greek monarchy that came into being in the seventh c...
Hamlet, which is one of the masterpieces of William Shakespeare, narrates the tragedy of the Prince ...
Jean Delumeau, in his seminal history of fear (Fear in the West, first published in 1978) points to ...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
The Attic tragic stage is crowed by many ‘tyrannical’, or supposedly so, figures. Scholars have gene...
This thesis explores a particular discourse of fear in Classical Athens, most richly developed in th...
This thesis explores a particular discourse of fear in Classical Athens, most richly developed in th...
The theme of fear is a recurrent and relevant one in the great Athenian philosophies of the fourth c...
The theme of fear is a recurrent and relevant one in the great Athenian philosophies of the fourth c...
In the logic of tragedy, Clytemnestra represents the distorted anti-model in regard to gender-role a...
In his first tetralogy and Titus Andronicus, Shakespeare delineates two opposing views on historiogr...
Macbeth’s unsaying the murder of Duncan through a euphemistic use of “doing” encodes an inextricable...
Lorsque l’on pense à la peur, on ne mobilise pas toujours les mots de sens voisin comme anxiété, ter...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
Tyranny (tyrannis) is a name given to a type of Greek monarchy that came into being in the seventh c...
Hamlet, which is one of the masterpieces of William Shakespeare, narrates the tragedy of the Prince ...
Jean Delumeau, in his seminal history of fear (Fear in the West, first published in 1978) points to ...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
The Attic tragic stage is crowed by many ‘tyrannical’, or supposedly so, figures. Scholars have gene...
This thesis explores a particular discourse of fear in Classical Athens, most richly developed in th...
This thesis explores a particular discourse of fear in Classical Athens, most richly developed in th...
The theme of fear is a recurrent and relevant one in the great Athenian philosophies of the fourth c...
The theme of fear is a recurrent and relevant one in the great Athenian philosophies of the fourth c...
In the logic of tragedy, Clytemnestra represents the distorted anti-model in regard to gender-role a...
In his first tetralogy and Titus Andronicus, Shakespeare delineates two opposing views on historiogr...
Macbeth’s unsaying the murder of Duncan through a euphemistic use of “doing” encodes an inextricable...
Lorsque l’on pense à la peur, on ne mobilise pas toujours les mots de sens voisin comme anxiété, ter...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
Tyranny (tyrannis) is a name given to a type of Greek monarchy that came into being in the seventh c...
Hamlet, which is one of the masterpieces of William Shakespeare, narrates the tragedy of the Prince ...
Jean Delumeau, in his seminal history of fear (Fear in the West, first published in 1978) points to ...