Interpreting Greek tragedy : myth, poetry, text /
Charles Segal.
- Ithaca, N.Y. : Cornell University Press, 1986.
- 384 p. ; 24 cm.
- 882/.01/09 .
Essays published over a period of twenty years.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Greek tragedy and society -- Greek myth as a semiotic and structural system and the problem of tragedy -- Greek tragedy -- Visual symbolism and visual effects in Sophocles -- Sophocles' praise of man and the conflicts of the Antigone -- The tragedy of the Hippolytus -- The two worlds of Euripides' Helen -- Pentheus and Hippolytus on the couch and on the grid -- Euripides' Bacchae -- Boundary violation and the landscape of the self in Senecan tragedy -- Tragedy, corporeality, and the texture of language -- Literature and interpretation.