Description
About the Author
Nicole Loraux was Professor of History and Anthropology of the Greek Polis at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris. She was the author of The Divided City, The Children of Athena, The Experiences of Tiresias, and Mothers in Mourning, among other titles.
Reviews
A vivid demonstration of how women die in Greek tragedy... Exciting and erudite...the graceful scholarship and sound judgment that Loraux demonstrates should nudge the classical tradition toward more writing in this direction. -- John Chioles * New York Times Book Review *
Remarkable not only for the breadth and precision of its scholarship and the refined subtlety of its interpretations but also for the wealth of meaningful connections it suggests... Challenging and brilliant throughout... Its exploration of the social, psychological, and physical implications of the deaths the poets contrived for their female characters adds a new dimension to our understanding of Attic tragedy. -- Bernard Knox * New York Review of Books *
Loraux elegantly unfolds from the language of tragedy a discourse about women... This is a very fine book, which opens new dimensions in our understanding of Athenian civic ideology, tragedy's paradoxical nature as both relaxing and confirming boundaries, and the social dynamics of gender distinctions. -- William G. Thalmann * Philosophy and Literature *
Book Information
ISBN 9780674902268
Author Nicole Loraux
Format Paperback
Page Count 114
Imprint Harvard University Press
Publisher Harvard University Press
Weight(grams) 181g