Le concept d’hybris s’applique-t-il à la lecture des Phéniciennes ?

It is customary to see The Phoenician Women as centered on the pleonexia, or excessive covetousness, shown by the two brothers, which relates the play to the political horizon of the fifth century rather than to the question of hubris and its religious connotations, w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christine Amiech
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Presses universitaires de Caen 2006-12-01
Series:Kentron
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/kentron/1769
Description
Summary:It is customary to see The Phoenician Women as centered on the pleonexia, or excessive covetousness, shown by the two brothers, which relates the play to the political horizon of the fifth century rather than to the question of hubris and its religious connotations, which are necessary to tragedy. Yet the Aeschylean spirit is not absent from Euripides’ treatment of the myth of the Seven Against Thebes. His essential innovation in relation to Aeschylus, i. e. the episode of Menoeceus, provides further reason to revise the traditional view. This episode is inseparable from the body of legends about the foundation of Thebes, which provokes the wrath of Ares. In this respect the episode, which is central to the play, reintroduces the notion of hubris and so places The Phoenician Women among tragedies of the first importance.
ISSN:0765-0590
2264-1459