Euripides and Quotation Culture
eBook - PDF

Euripides and Quotation Culture

  1. 224 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Euripides and Quotation Culture

About this book

Presenting a new approach to Euripides' plays, this book explores the playwright's ancient tragedies in relation to quotation culture. Treating extant works and lost works side-by-side, Matthew Wright presents a selective survey of ways in which Euripidean tragedy was quoted within antiquity, both in social contexts (on the comic stage, at symposia, in law courts, in education) and in different literary genres (drama, biography, oratory, philosophy, literary scholarship, history and anthologies). There is also a discussion of the connection between quotability and classic status, where Wright asks what quotations can tell us about ancient reading habits. The implication is that Euripides actively participated in quotation culture by deliberately making certain portions of his plays stand out as especially quotable. Within classical antiquity, Euripides was the most widely quoted author apart from Homer. His plays are full of 'quotable quotes', which were repeated so often that they acquired a life of their own. Hundreds of famous verses from Euripidean drama circulated widely within the ancient world, even after the plays in which they originally featured became forgotten or vanished completely. Indeed, the majority of Euripides' tragedies now survive only in the form of scattered quotations, otherwise known to us as 'fragments'. It is this corpus of fragmentary quotations, along with his extant plays, that makes Euripides such an interesting case study in the world of quotation culture. This book is the first of its kind to understand Euripides' work through this lens, as well as opening up quotation culture as a major theme of interest within classical scholarship.

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Yes, you can access Euripides and Quotation Culture by Matthew Wright in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Ancient & Classical Drama. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Halftitle page
  3. Classical Literature and Society
  4. Title page
  5. Copyright page
  6. Contents
  7. Preface
  8. 1 ‘Awfully Full of Quotations’
  9. 2 Quotation Marks and Framing Devices
  10. 3 How to Quote from Books You Haven’t Read
  11. 4 Quotations in the Theatre
  12. 5 Quotations in the Classroom
  13. 6 Quotation as Performance
  14. 7 Quotations and Life
  15. Notes
  16. Bibliography
  17. Index