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Sons of the Gods, Children of Earth

出版社
出版日期
2019/03/15
閱讀格式
EPUB
書籍分類
學科分類
ISBN
9781501742583

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In this ambitious and venturesome book, Peter W. Rose applies the insights of Marxist theory to a number of central Greek literary and philosophical texts. He explores major points in the trajectory from Homer to Plato where the ideology of inherited excellence—beliefs about descent from gods or heroes—is elaborated and challenged. Rose offers subtle and penetrating new readings of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, Pindar's Tenth Pythian Ode, Aeschylus's Oresteia, Sophokles' Philoktetes, and Plato's Republic.Rose rejects the view of art as a mere reflection of social and political reality—a view that is characteristic not only of most Marxist but of most historically oriented treatments of classical literature. He applies instead a Marxian hermeneutic derived from the work of the Frankfurt School and Fredric Jameson. His readings focus on illuminating a politics of form within the text, while responding to historically specific social, political, and economic realities. Each work, he asserts, both reflects contemporary conflicts over wealth, power, and gender roles and constitutes an attempt to transcend the status quo by projecting an ideal community. Following Marx, Rose maintains that critical engagement with the limitations of the utopian dreams of the past is the only means to the realization of freedom in the present.Classicists and their students, literary theorists, philosophers, comparatists, and Marxist critics will find Sons of the Gods, Children of Earth challenging reading.
  • Preface
  • Introduction: Marxism and the Classics
    • The Problem of Methodology in the Study of the Classics Today
    • Orthodox Marxism
    • After Orthodoxy: Some Unorthodox Marxists
    • Marxizing Alternatives to Marxism
    • Marx and Utopia: The Quest for Realizable Freedom
    • Consciousness, Class, and Doing History
    • Marx and Cultural Production
    • Mediation, Hegemony, and Overdetermination
    • Jameson: The Double Hermeneutic and the Utopian Impulse
  • 1. How Conservative Is the Iliad?
    • The Form: Determinism by Rhythm, by Mode of Composition, by Genre
    • The Traditional Poem and a Traditional Worldview?
    • The World in the Poems and the World of the Poems
    • Ideology in the Poems
    • Formulas: Birth and the Conflict of King against King
    • Type-Scenes: Contradictions over Property and Merit
    • Major Story Patterns
    • The Poet and His Audience
  • 2. Ambivalence and Identity in the Odyssey
    • Relation to the Iliad, Hesiod, and History
    • Innovations in the Narrative Structure of the Odyssey
    • The Poet in the Poem
    • Historicizing the Hero’s Identity Abroad and at Home
    • Ambiguity, History, and Utopia
  • 3. Historicizing Pindar: Pythian 10
    • Pindar’s Place in the So-Called Lyric Age
    • The Problem of Pindar’s Politics
    • The Epinician Form
    • Toward a Double Hermeneutic of Pythian 10
    • History and the “Inner Logic of the Poem”
  • 4. Aeschylus’ Oresteia: Dialectical Inheritance
    • The Politics of the Tragic Form
    • Aeschylean Dialectics
    • Justice and Aeschylus’ Presentation of Class
    • Sexual Politics and the Aristocracy
    • Politics in the Libation Bearers
    • The Politics of Aeschylean Religion
    • Patriarchy and Misogyny in the Libation Bearers
    • Democracy in the Eumenides
    • Sexual Politics: Vision and Reality
    • Utopian Vision versus Tragic Reality
  • 5. Sophokles’ Philoktetes and the Teachings of the Sophists: A Counteroffensive
    • Sophokles and Aeschylus
    • Aristocratic Terminology and the Role of the Sophists
    • Sophistic Anthropology: Three Stages
    • Sophokles’ Response: Transforming Anthropology into Drama
    • The Way Out: The Supersession of the Sophists
    • The Athens of 409 B.C.
    • The Utopian Moment
  • 6. Plato’s Solution to the Ideological Crisis of the Greek Aristocracy
    • Ideology and History
    • What Crises?
    • Plato’s Response: The Form and Structure of the Republic
    • General Characteristics of Plato’s Solutions
    • Plato’s Discourse of Phusis
    • Phusis and Didachē: The Collapse of an Opposition
    • Conclusion
  • Afterword
  • References
  • Index
  • 出版地 美國
  • 語言 英文

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