Vulnerability is not often associated with virtue. Yet to be vulnerable is central to human experience. In this book, McCoy examines ways in which Greek epic, tragedy, and philosophy have important insights to offer about the nature of human vulnerability and how human beings might better come to terms with their own vulnerability. While studies of Greek heroism and virtue often focus on strength of character, prowess in war, or the achievement of honor for oneself or one’s society, McCoy examines another side to Greek thought that extols the recognition and proper acceptance of vulnerability. McCoy begins with the literary works of Homer’s Iliad, Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus and Philoctetes before expanding her analysis to ph...
This thesis explores the manifestations of trauma and its impact on language and the titular charact...
Greek tragedy and Greek medicine both treat forms of human suffering. This dissertation investigates...
Self-contradiction, a key quality of the Byronic hero, is nothing new to tragic literary figures. As...
Vulnerability is not often associated with virtue. Yet to be vulnerable is central to human experien...
Vulnerability is not often associated with virtue. Yet to be vulnerable is central to human experien...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-221) and index.Woundedness, narrative, and community ...
Scheijnen Tine. Marina Berzins McCoy, Wounded Heroes. Vulnerability as a Virtue in Ancient Greek Lit...
Sophocles’ tragedy, Philoctetes, is the drama of vulnerability. The play is well noted, even if it ...
Around the late eighth or early seventh century B.C., a poet, known to later ages as Homer, composed...
Provenance has always been important to me. Knowing who has handled a set of ideas, and how those id...
Soldiers sustaining battle wounds was both an historical reality as a popular literary theme in the ...
As opposed to his philosophic predecessor Plato, who feared the effect poetry could have on moral ed...
Conceptions of the moral relevance of vulnerability in human life have assumed a deserved prominence...
Draws on Plato to argue that Homer elevated private life as the locus of true friendship and the cat...
The modern mind likes its heroism served with death. They died heroes begin news reports of death ...
This thesis explores the manifestations of trauma and its impact on language and the titular charact...
Greek tragedy and Greek medicine both treat forms of human suffering. This dissertation investigates...
Self-contradiction, a key quality of the Byronic hero, is nothing new to tragic literary figures. As...
Vulnerability is not often associated with virtue. Yet to be vulnerable is central to human experien...
Vulnerability is not often associated with virtue. Yet to be vulnerable is central to human experien...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-221) and index.Woundedness, narrative, and community ...
Scheijnen Tine. Marina Berzins McCoy, Wounded Heroes. Vulnerability as a Virtue in Ancient Greek Lit...
Sophocles’ tragedy, Philoctetes, is the drama of vulnerability. The play is well noted, even if it ...
Around the late eighth or early seventh century B.C., a poet, known to later ages as Homer, composed...
Provenance has always been important to me. Knowing who has handled a set of ideas, and how those id...
Soldiers sustaining battle wounds was both an historical reality as a popular literary theme in the ...
As opposed to his philosophic predecessor Plato, who feared the effect poetry could have on moral ed...
Conceptions of the moral relevance of vulnerability in human life have assumed a deserved prominence...
Draws on Plato to argue that Homer elevated private life as the locus of true friendship and the cat...
The modern mind likes its heroism served with death. They died heroes begin news reports of death ...
This thesis explores the manifestations of trauma and its impact on language and the titular charact...
Greek tragedy and Greek medicine both treat forms of human suffering. This dissertation investigates...
Self-contradiction, a key quality of the Byronic hero, is nothing new to tragic literary figures. As...