Tragedy and After: Euripides, Shakespeare, GoetheMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1986 - 223 pages "Faas has written a provocative book, challenging the familiar literary and philosophical theories of tragedy from Aristotle onwards. His judicious use of nietzschean insights both stimulates and compels assent. Exuberant scholarship from first page to last." Irving Layton. |
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Repudiations of the Tragic | 13 |
Euripides Shakespeare Goethe | 19 |
The Birth of Tragedy | 25 |
Towards Antitragedy | 42 |
Towards Posttragedy | 54 |
From Tragic to Antitragic Closure | 93 |
Hamlet or the SlaveMoralist Turned Ascetic Priest III | 111 |
The Posttragic Vision of Romance | 129 |
From King Lear to The Two Noble Kinsmen | 141 |
Goethes Transcendence of Tragedy | 155 |
Conclusion | 189 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absurd Aegisthus Aeschylus Aeschylus's anti-hero anti-tragedies anti-tragic Apollo Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's audience manipulation Bacchae Bacon birth character Chorus Christian Clytaemnestra concept critics Cymbeline daughter death dialectic Dionysus divine Dushmanta Electra Essays ed Smith ESTRAGON eternal Eumenides Euripides evil fact fate father Faust final Freud Furies gods Goethe Goethe's guilt Hamlet heaven Hegel hell Heracles hero human Ibid imagination instance invokes justice Kālidāsa kill King Lear Leontes London madness Menelaus Montaigne Montaigne's moral mother murder myth nature Nietzsche Nietzsche's Noble Kinsmen notion Oedipus Rex Oresteia Orestes Pentheus Pericles philosopher pity play play's playwright plot poet Poetics poetry post-tragedy post-tragic protagonist psychological question rebirth revenge role Romeo and Juliet Sacontala Sanskrit drama scene seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's romances similar simply Sophocles spectator suffering suicide teleological theatre things tion traditional tragic vision trans transcendence Troilus turn University Press Urfaust V.iii Winter's Tale words York Zeus