This paper investigates appeals to law in Euripides’ Medea, dramatic elements which seem to point to two distinct aspects in the development of Greek Law. The text seems to appeal to: a) archaic law when the oath appears adequate (or sufficient) to establish wedlock, and b) classical law with respect to other aspects of familial jurisprudence. I argue that Euripides has intentionally contrasted these legal perspectives as part of a larger contrasting narrative. Euripides begins by introducing the essentials features of the myth of Medea in terms of its archaic context. In the latter half, he then in turn contrasts this narrative with contemporary views, and thus offers a critical reflection upon his own culture and society. These contrastin...
This study focuses on the intersection between myth, literature and law in Oedipus the King, by Soph...
After a brief introduction to Solon and the Testamentary Law in the next section, Part III of this p...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
This paper investigates appeals to law in Euripides’ Medea, dramatic elements which seem to point to...
The subject of this paper is the peculiar Athenian law, generally referred to as the Testamentary La...
This article offers a substantial new interpretation of Aeschylus’ Oresteia, one of the most importa...
The Law operates by, and through, the creation of ideal benchmarks of conduct that are deemed to be ...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
4 pagesThe term “crime” covers a broad spectrum of illegal behavior, like murder, doing drugs, thef...
This thesis aims to understand the social structures and normative language that underpinned the con...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
Literature has long been "seen as a field of activity set apart from ordinary life." But, this moder...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
Among the modern interpretations of Medea, one of the most influential plays by Euripides, which was...
This study focuses on the intersection between myth, literature and law in Oedipus the King, by Soph...
After a brief introduction to Solon and the Testamentary Law in the next section, Part III of this p...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
This paper investigates appeals to law in Euripides’ Medea, dramatic elements which seem to point to...
The subject of this paper is the peculiar Athenian law, generally referred to as the Testamentary La...
This article offers a substantial new interpretation of Aeschylus’ Oresteia, one of the most importa...
The Law operates by, and through, the creation of ideal benchmarks of conduct that are deemed to be ...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
4 pagesThe term “crime” covers a broad spectrum of illegal behavior, like murder, doing drugs, thef...
This thesis aims to understand the social structures and normative language that underpinned the con...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
Literature has long been "seen as a field of activity set apart from ordinary life." But, this moder...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
Among the modern interpretations of Medea, one of the most influential plays by Euripides, which was...
This study focuses on the intersection between myth, literature and law in Oedipus the King, by Soph...
After a brief introduction to Solon and the Testamentary Law in the next section, Part III of this p...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...