Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-rnpqb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-28T10:14:30.630Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2023

Simon Goldhill
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Reading Greek Tragedy , pp. 339 - 357
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adams, S. M. (1955) ‘The Ajax of Sophocles’, Phoenix 9: 93110.Google Scholar
Adkins, A. W. (1963) ‘“Friendship” and “self-sufficiency” in Homer and Aristotle’, C.Q. 13: 3045.Google Scholar
Ahmed, S. (2004) The Cultural Politics of Emotion. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Allen, J. T. (1938) On the Program of the City Dionysia during the Peloponnesian War. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Allen, R. E. (1980) Socrates and Legal Obligation. Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Allan, W. and Kelly, A. (2013) ‘Listening to many voices: Greek tragedy as popular art’, in Marmodoro, and Hill, eds (2013): 77122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Altieri, C. (2003) The Particulars of Rapture: an aesthetics of the affects. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Andrewes, A. (1956) The Greek Tyrants. London.Google Scholar
Andrewes, A. (1971) Greek Society. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Andujar, R. (2020) The Greek Trilogy of Luis Alfaro: Electricidad, Oedipus el Ray, Mojada. London.Google Scholar
Andujar, R. and Nikoloutsos, K. eds (2020) Greeks and Romans on the Latin American Stage. London.Google Scholar
Anscombe, G. E. (1957) Intention. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Arendt, H. (2017 [1951]) The Origin of Totalitarianism. London.Google Scholar
Ariès, P. (1962) Centuries of Childhood: a social history of family life. Trans. Balddick, R. London.Google Scholar
Arnott, G. (1973) ‘Euripides and the unexpected’, G. & R. 20: 4964.Google Scholar
Arnott, G. (1981) ‘Double the vision: a reading of Euripides’ Electra’, G. & R. 28: 179–92.Google Scholar
Arnott, P. D. (1959) An Introduction to Greek Theatre. London.Google Scholar
Arrowsmith, W. (1964) ‘A Greek theatre of ideas’, in Ideas in Drama, ed. Gasner, E. New York: 141.Google Scholar
Arrowsmith, W. (1968) ‘Euripides’ theatre of ideas’, in Segal, E. (1968): 1333.Google Scholar
Arthur, M. (1972) ‘The choral odes of the Bacchae of Euripides’, Y.C.S. 22: 145–80.Google Scholar
Arthur, M. (1973) ‘Early Greece: the origins of Western attitudes toward women’, Arethusa 6.1: 758.Google Scholar
Arthur, M. (1981) ‘The divided world of Iliad VI’, Women’s Studies 8.1 & 2: 2146.Google Scholar
Arthur, M. (1983) ‘The dream of a world without women: poetics and the circles of order in the Theogony prooemium’, Arethusa 16.1 & 2: 97116.Google Scholar
Austin, C. (1984) ‘Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus 873’, C.Q. 34: 233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, M. and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1972) Economies et sociétés en Grèce ancienne. Paris.Google Scholar
Austin, M. and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1975) Archery at the Dark of the Moon: poetic problems in Homer’s Odyssey. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Avery, H. C. (1968) ‘“My tongue swore but my mind is unsworn”’, T.A.P.A. 99: 1935.Google Scholar
Bachofen, J. J. (1967) Myth, Religion and Mother-Right: Selected Writings. Trans. Manheim, R. London.Google Scholar
Bain, D. (1975) ‘Audience address in Greek tragedy’, C.Q. 25: 1325.Google Scholar
Bain, D. (1977) Actors and Audience: a study of asides and related conventions. Oxford.Google Scholar
Bakewell, G. (2013) Aeschylus’ Suppliant Women: the tragedy of immigration.Madison.Google Scholar
Baldry, H. C. (1981) The Greek Tragic Theatre. London.Google Scholar
Bamberger, J. (1975) ‘The myth of matriarchy: why men rule in primitive society’, in Rosaldo, and Lamphere, (1975): 263–80.Google Scholar
Barrett, W. S. (1964) Euripides’ Hippolytos. Oxford.Google Scholar
Barthes, R. (1975) S/Z. Trans. Miller, R. London.Google Scholar
Barthes, R. (1977) ‘The death of the author’, in Image, Music, Text. Trans. Heath, S. Glasgow: 142–8.Google Scholar
Bassi, K. (2018) ‘Morbid materialism: the matter of the corpse in Euripides’ Alcestis’, in Telò, and Mueller, eds (2018): 17–34.Google Scholar
Bayley, J. (1974) ‘Character and consciousness’, N.L.H. 5.2: 225–35.Google Scholar
Beauvoir, S. (1972) The Second Sex. Trans. Parshley, H. M. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Beck, F. A. (1975) Album of Greek Education. Sydney.Google Scholar
Beer, G. (1983) Darwin’s Plots: evolutionary narrative in Darwin, George Eliot and nineteenth-century fiction. London.Google Scholar
Belfiore, E. (1992) Tragic Pleasures: Aristotle on Plot and Emotion. Princeton.Google Scholar
Belfiore, E. (2000) Murder among Friends: violation of philia in Greek tragedy. New York and Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benardete, S. (1975a) ‘A reading of Sophocles’ Antigone I’, Interpretation 4.23: 148–96.Google Scholar
Benardete, S. (1975b) ‘A reading of Sophocles’ Antigone II’, Interpretation 5.1: 155.Google Scholar
Benardete, S. (1975c) ‘A reading of Sophocles’ Antigone III’, Interpretation 5.2: 148–84.Google Scholar
Bennett, J. (2010) Vibrant Matter: a political ecology of things. Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Bennett, J. S. (1989) ‘A reading of Samson Agonistes’, in Danielson, ed. (1989): 225–41.Google Scholar
Benveniste, E. (1973) Indo-European Language and Society. Trans. Palmer, E. London.Google Scholar
Bergren, A. L. (1983) ‘Language and the female in early Greek thought’, Arethusa 16.1 & 2: 6995.Google Scholar
Best, S. and Marcus, S. eds (2009) Surface Reading. Representations 108.Google Scholar
Billings, J. (2014) Genealogy of the Tragic: Greek tragedy and German philosophy. Princeton.Google Scholar
Billings, J., Budelmann, F. and Macintosh, F. eds (2013) Choruses, Ancient and Modern. Oxford.Google Scholar
Billings, J. and Leonard, M. eds (2015) Tragedy and the Idea of Modernity. Oxford.Google Scholar
Blok, J. (2009) ‘Gentrifying genealogy: on the genesis of the Athenian autochthony myth’, in Dill, and Wilde, eds (2009): 251–75.Google Scholar
Blundell, M. W. (1989) Helping Friends and Harming Enemies: a study in Sophocles and Greek ethics. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Boedeker, D. and Raaflaub, K. eds. (1998) Democracy, Empire and the Arts in Fifth-Century Athens. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1977) Outline of a Theory of Practice. Trans. Nice, R. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bowra, C. M. (1944) Sophoclean Tragedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Brown, W. E. (1965–6) ‘Sophocles’ Ajax and Homer’s Hector’, C.J. 61: 118–21.Google Scholar
Brown, P. and Ograjensek, S. eds (2010) Ancient Drama in Music for the Modern Stage. Oxford.Google Scholar
Budelmann, F. (2000) The Language of Sophocles. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bulloch, A. W. (1985) Callimachus: the Fifth Hymn. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Burkert, W. (1983) Homo Necans: the anthropology of ancient Greek sacrificial ritual and myth. Trans. Bing, P. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Burnyeat, M. (1976a) ‘Protagoras and self-refutation in later Greek philosophy’, The Philosophical Review 85.1: 4469.Google Scholar
Burnyeat, M. (1976b) ‘Protagoras and self-refutation in Plato’s Theaetetus’, The Philosophical Review 85.2: 172–95.Google Scholar
Butler, J. (2000) Antigone’s Claim: kinship between life and death. New York.Google Scholar
Butler, S. ed. (2016) Deep Classics: rethinking classical reception. London and New York.Google Scholar
Calame, C. (1977) Les Chœurs de jeunes filles en Grèce archaïque. 2 vols. Rome.Google Scholar
Calogero, G. (1957) ‘Gorgias and the Socratic principle nemo sua sponte peccat, J.H.S. 77: 1217.Google Scholar
Cameron, A. and Kuhrt, A. eds. (1983) Images of Women in Antiquity. London and Melbourne.Google Scholar
Canetti, E. ([1960] 1984) Crowds and Power. Trans. Harrison, C. New York.Google Scholar
Carey, J. (2002) ‘A work in praise of terrorism? September 11 and Samson Agonistes’, TLS, 6 September 2002: 622–6.Google Scholar
Carter, D. (2007) The Politics of Greek Tragedy. Bristol.Google Scholar
Carter, D. ed. (2011) Why Athens? A reconsideration of tragic politics. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Case, Z. (2021) ‘What’s Nietzsche to Euripides? The aesthetics of suffering in Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy and Euripides’ Trojan Women, CCJ 67: 2550.Google Scholar
Castellani, V. (1976) ‘That troubled house of Pentheus in Euripides’ Bacchae, T.A.P.A. 106: 6183.Google Scholar
Cavell, S. (1976) Must We Mean What We Say? Cambridge.Google Scholar
La Cité des images: religion et société en Grèce antique. (1984). Institut d’archéologie et d’histoire ancienne, Lausanne. Centre de recherches comparés sur les sociétés anciennes. Paris.Google Scholar
Cixoux, H. (1974) ‘The character of “character”’, N.L.H. 5.2: 383402.Google Scholar
Clarke, H. C. (1981) Homer’s Readers. Newark, NJ.Google Scholar
Classen, C. J. ed. (1976) Sophistik. Darmstadt.Google Scholar
Clay, D. (1982) ‘Unspeakable words in Greek tragedy’, A.J.P. 103: 277–98.Google Scholar
Coleman, R. G. G. (1972) The role of the chorus in SophoclesAntigone’, P.C.P.S. 198: 427.Google Scholar
Collard, C. (1975) ‘Formal debates in Euripides’ drama’, G. & R. 22: 5871.Google Scholar
Collinge, N. E. (1962) ‘Medical terms and clinical attitudes in the tragedians’, B.I.C.S. 9: 4355.Google Scholar
Connor, W. (1971) The New Politicians of Fifth-Century Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Coward, R. (1983) Patriarchal Precedents. London.Google Scholar
Coward, R. and Ellis, J. (1977) Language and Materialism. London.Google Scholar
Critchley, S. (2017) What Do We Think About When We Think about Football. London.Google Scholar
Croally, N. (1994) Euripidean Polemic: Trojan Women and the function of tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Crotty, K. (1982) Song and Action: the victory odes of Pindar. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Csapo, E., Goette, H., Green, J. R. and Wilson, P. eds (2018) Greek Theatre in the Fourth Century BC. Berlin.Google Scholar
Culler, J. (1975) Structuralist Poetics. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Danielson, D. ed. (1989) The Cambridge Companion to Milton. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Daube, D. (1972) Civil Disobedience in Antiquity. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
David, E. (1984) ‘Solon, neutrality and partisan literature of late fifth-century Athens’, M.H. 41: 129–38.Google Scholar
Davies, J. K. (1977) ‘Athenian citizenship: the descent group and the alternatives’, C.J. 73.2: 105–21.Google Scholar
Davies, J. K. (1978) Democracy and Classical Greece. Hassocks.Google Scholar
Davison, J. A. (1953) ‘Protagoras, Democritus, and Anaxagoras’, C.Q. 3: 3345.Google Scholar
Dawe, R. D. (1963) ‘Inconsistency of plot and character in Aeschylus’, P.C.P.S. 9: 2162.Google Scholar
Dawe, R. D. (1982) Sophocles: Oedipus Rex. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Denniston, J. D. (1939) Euripides’ Electra. Oxford.Google Scholar
Denniston, J. D. and Page, D. L. (1957) Aeschylus’ Agamemnon. Oxford.Google Scholar
De Pourcq, M., de Haan, N., and Rijser, D. eds (2021) Framing Classical Reception Studies: different perspectives on a developing field. Leiden.Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (1967) De la grammatologie. Paris.Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (1976) ‘Signature, event, context’, Glyph 1: 172–99.Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (1977) ‘Limited Inc. abc.’, Glyph 2: 162254.Google Scholar
Destrée, P. and Herrmann, F.-G. eds (2011) Plato and the Poets. Leiden.Google Scholar
Detienne, M. (1967) Les Maitres de vérité dans la Grèce archaïque. Paris.Google Scholar
Detienne, M.(1972) ‘Entre bêtes et dieux’, Nouvelle revue de psychanalyse 6: 231–42. Trans. M. Muellner and L. Muellner in Gordon (1981) : 215–28.Google Scholar
Detienne, M. (1979) ‘Violentes “eugenies” en plein Thesmophories: des femmes couvertes de sang’, in Detienne, and Vernant, (1979).Google Scholar
Detienne, M. (1981) L’invention de la mythologie. Paris.Google Scholar
Detienne, M. and Vernant, J.-P. (1978) Cunning Intelligence in Greek Culture and Society. Trans. Lloyd, J. Brighton.Google Scholar
Detienne, M. and Vernant, J.-P. (1979) La Cuisine du sacrifice en pays Grec. Paris.Google Scholar
Dill, U. and Walde, C. eds (2009) Antike Mythen: Medien, Transformationen und Konstruktionen. Berlin.Google Scholar
Dodds, E. R. (1925) ‘The ΑΙΔΩΣ of Phaedra and the meaning of the Hippolytus’, C.R. 39: 102–4.Google Scholar
Dodds, E. R. (1951) The Greeks and the Irrational. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Dodds, E. R. (1960) Euripides’ Bacchae. Oxford.Google Scholar
Dodds, E. R. (1966) ‘On misunderstanding Oedipus Rex’, G. & R. 13: 3749.Google Scholar
Dollimore, J. (1984) Radical Tragedy: religion, ideology and power in the drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Brighton.Google Scholar
Donzelli, G. B. (1978) Studio sull’ Elettra di Euripide. Catania.Google Scholar
Dosse, F. (2020) Pierre Vidal-Naquet. Paris.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1973) ‘Classical Greek attitudes to sexual behaviour’, Arethusa 6: 5973.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1974) Greek Popular Morality in the Time of Plato and Aristotle. Oxford.Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. (1975) ‘The freedom of the intellectual in Greek society’, Talanta 7: 2454.Google Scholar
du Bois, P. (1982) History, Rhetorical Description and the Epic: from Homer to Spenser. Cambridge.Google Scholar
du Bois, P. (1984) Centaurs and Amazons: women and the pre-history of the great chain of being. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
du Bois, P. (2003) Slaves and Other Objects. Chicago.Google Scholar
Durand, J. (1986) Sacrifice et labour en Grèce ancienne: essai d’anthropologie religieuse. Paris.Google Scholar
Easterling, P. E. (1973) ‘Presentation of character in Aeschylus’, G.& R. 20: 319.Google Scholar
Easterling, P. E. (1977) ‘Character in Sophocles’, G. & R. 24: 121–9.Google Scholar
Easterling, P. E. (1978) Philoctetes and modern criticism’, ICS 3: 2739.Google Scholar
Easterling, P. E. (1984) ‘The tragic Homer’, B.I.C.S. 31: 18.Google Scholar
Easterling, P. ed. (1997) The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Eco, U. (1976) A Theory of Semiotics. Bloomington.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, V. (1948) ‘The foundation of Thurii’, A.J.P. 59: 149–70.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, V. (1954) Sophocles and Pericles. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, V. (1960) The Greek State. Oxford.Google Scholar
Engels, F. (1972) Origins of the Family, Private Property and the State. Trans. Leacock, E. B. London.Google Scholar
Erbse, E. (1984) Studien zum Prolog der euripideischen Tragodie. Berlin.Google Scholar
Euben, J. P. ed. (1986) Greek Tragedy and Political Theory. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Euben, J. P. (1990) The Tragedy of Political Theory: the road not taken. Princeton.Google Scholar
Ewans, M. (1982) Wagner and Aeschylus: the Ring and the Oresteia. London.Google Scholar
Ewans, M. (2007) Opera from the Greek: studies in the poetics of appropriation. Aldershot.Google Scholar
Fehrle, E. (1966) Die kultische Keuschheit im Altertum. Berlin. First published 1910.Google Scholar
Felski, R. ed. (2008) Rethinking Tragedy. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1970) ‘Ambiguity in Ajax’, Dioniso 44: 1229.Google Scholar
Festugière, A.-J. (1948) Hippocrate: L’ancienne médecine. Etudes et commentaires IV. Paris.Google Scholar
Finglass, P. (2007) Sophocles: Electra. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Finglass, P. (2011) Sophocles: Ajax. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Finglass, P. (2018) Sophocles: Oedipus Tyrannus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1968) ‘The alienability of land in ancient Greece: a point of view’, Eirene 7: 2532.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1972) Introduction to Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War, trans. Warner, R. Harmondsworth: 932.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1980) Ancient Slavery and Modem Ideology. London.Google Scholar
Finley, M. I. (1983) Politics in the Ancient World. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, G. J. (1973) ‘Misconception, hypocrisy and the structure of Euripides’ Hippolytus’, Ramus 2: 2044.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (2000) Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination: Roman literature and its contexts. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Flashar, H. (1991) Inszenierung der Antike: das griechische Drama auf der Bühne der Neuzeit 1585–1990. Munich.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (1978) ‘“Reverse Similes” and sex roles in the Odyssey’, Arethusa 11: 726.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (1980) ‘The masque of Dionysus’, T.A.P.A. 110: 107–33.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (1982a) ‘The “female intruder” reconsidered: women in Aristophanes’ Lysistrata and Ecclesiazusae’, C.P. 77: 121.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. ed. (1982b) Reflections of Women in Antiquity. London, Paris, New York.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (1985) Ritual Irony: poetry and sacrifice in Euripides. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Foley, H. P. (2012) Reimagining Greek Tragedy on the American Stage. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Forrest, W. G. (1966) The Emergence of Greek Democracy. London.Google Scholar
Forrester, J. (1980) Language and the Origins of Psychoanalysis. London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsdyke, S. (2012) ‘“Born from the earth”: the political uses of an Athenian myth’, Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions 12: 119–41.Google Scholar
Foster, D. (2010) Wagner’s Ring Cycle and the Greeks. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1972) The Archaeology of Knowledge. Trans. Sheridan, A. M. London.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1979What is an author?’, in Textual Strategies: perspectives in post-structuralist criticism, ed. Harari, J. V. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1985) The Use of Pleasure. London and New York.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1986) The Care of the Self. London and New York.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (2011) The Government of Self and Others: lectures at the Collège de France 1982–3, ed. Gros, F.; trans. Burchell, G. New York.Google Scholar
Fraenkel, E. (1950) Aeschylus’ Agamemnon. 3 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fuks, A. (1953) The Ancestral Constitution. London.Google Scholar
Gagarin, M. (1986) Early Greek Law. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Gagné, R. (2013) Ancestral Fault in Ancient Greece. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gagné, R. and Hopman, M. eds (2013) Choral Mediations in Greek Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Garnsey, P. (1996) Ideas of Slavery from Aristotle to Augustine. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Garton, C. (1957) ‘Characterisation in Greek tragedy’, J.H.S. 77: 247–54.Google Scholar
Gellie, G. H. (1963) ‘Character in Greek tragedy’, A.U.M.L.A. 20: 2456.Google Scholar
Gellie, G. H. (1972) Sophocles: a reading. Melbourne.Google Scholar
Gellie, G. H. (1981) ‘Tragedy and Euripides’ Electra’, B.I.C.S. 28: 112.Google Scholar
Gernet, L. (1981) The Anthropology of Ancient Greece. Trans. Hamilton, J. and Nagy, B. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Giangrande, G. (1970) ‘Hellenistic poetry and Homer’, A.C. 39: 4677.Google Scholar
Gibert, J. (2003) ‘Apollo’s Sacrifice: the limits of a metaphor in Greek tragedy’, H.S.C.P. 101: 159206.Google Scholar
Gibert, J. (2019) Euripides: Ion. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gibson, R. (2002) ‘Cf. e.g.: a typology of “parallels” and the function of commentaries on Latin poetry’, in Gibson, and Kraus, eds (2002): 331–57.Google Scholar
Gibson, R. and Kraus, C. eds (2002) Classical Commentaries: histories, practices, theory. Leiden.Google Scholar
Girard, R. (1977) Violence and the Sacred. Trans. Gregory, P. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Gleason, M. (2020) ‘Aretaeus and the ekphrasis of agony’, C.A. 39: 153–87.Google Scholar
Glotz, G. (1904) La Solidarité de la famille dans le droit criminel en Grèce. Paris.Google Scholar
Goff, B. (1988) ‘Euripides’ Ion 1132–65: the tent’, P.C.P.S. 34: 4254.Google Scholar
Goff, B. ed. (1995) History, Tragedy, Theory: dialogues on Athenian drama. Austin.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1984a) Language, Sexuality, Narrative: the Oresteia. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1984b) ‘Two notes on τέλος and related words in the Oresteia’, J.H.S. 104: 169–76.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1984c) ‘Exegesis: Oedipus (R)ex’, Arethusa 17: 177200.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1986) ‘Rhetoric and relevance: interpolation at Euripides’ Electra 367–400’, G.R.B.S. 27: 157–71.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1987) ‘The Great Dionysia and civic ideology’, J.H.S. 107: 5876.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1991) The Poet’s Voice: essays on poetics and Greek literature. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1994) ‘Representing democracy: women at the Great Dionysia’, in Osborne and Hornblower eds (1994): 347–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1996) ‘Collectivity and otherness: the authority of the tragic chorus: a response to Gould’, in Silk ed. (1996): 244–56.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (1999) ‘Wipe your glosses with what you know’, in Most ed. (1999): 380425.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2000) ‘Civic ideology and the problem of difference: the politics of Athenian tragedy, once again’, J.H.S. 120: 3456.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2002a) Who Needs Greek? Contests in the cultural history of Hellenism. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2002b) The Invention of Prose. Oxford.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2012) Sophocles and the Language of Tragedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2014) ‘The ends of tragedy: Schelling, Hegel and Oedipus’, P.M.L.A. 129: 634–48.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2017) ‘Is this reperformance?’, in Hunter, and Uhlig, eds (2017): 283302.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2021) ‘Sophocles’ Antigone, feminism’s Hegel, and the politics of form’, in Vasunia, ed. (2021): 4964.Google Scholar
Gomme, A. W. (1925) ‘The position of women in Athens’, C.P. 20: 126.Google Scholar
Gomperz, H. (1965) Sophistik und Rhetorik. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Gordon, R. L. ed. (1981) Myth, Religion and Society. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gould, J. P. (1978) ‘Dramatic character and “human intelligibility” in Greek tragedy’, P.C.P.S. 24: 4367.Google Scholar
Gould, J. P. (1980) ‘Law, custom and myth: aspects of the social position of women in classical Athens’, J.H.S. 100: 3859.Google Scholar
Gould, J. P. (1983) ‘Homeric epic and the tragic moment’, in Aspects of the Epic, eds. Winnifrith, T., Murray, P. and Gransden, K. W. London: 3245.Google Scholar
Gould, J. (1996) ‘Tragedy and collective experience’, in Silk, ed. (1996): 217–43.Google Scholar
Graeser, A. (1977) ‘On language, thought and reality in ancient Greek philosophy’, Dialectica 31: 359–88.Google Scholar
Green, A. (1969) Un Oeil en trop: le complexe d’Oedipe dans la tragedie. Paris.Google Scholar
Greg, M. and Seigworth, G. eds (2010) The Affect Theory Reader. Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Gregory, T. (2010) ‘The political messages of Samson Agonistes, Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 50: 175203.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. (2003) Asyl und Athen: die Konstruktion kollektiver Identität in der greichischen Tragödie. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Griffin, J. (1998) ‘The social function of Attic tragedy’, C.Q. 48: 3961.Google Scholar
Griffith, M. (1985) ‘Brilliant dynasts: power and politics in the Oresteia, C.A. 14: 62129.Google Scholar
Griffith, M. (1998) ‘The king and eye: the rule of the father in Greek tragedy’, P.C.P.S. 44: 2084.Google Scholar
Griffith, M. (1999) Sophocles: Antigone. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grote, G. (1888) The History of Greece, from the earliest period to the close of the generation contemporary with Alexander. 8 vols. London.Google Scholar
Guthrie, W. K. C. (1962–81) A History of Greek Philosophy. 6 vols. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Haigh, A. (1907) The Attic Theatre. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, E. (1989) Inventing the Barbarian: Greek self-definition through tragedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, E. (1996) ‘Is there a polis in Aristotle’s Poetics?’, in Silk ed. (1996): 295309.Google Scholar
Hall, E. and Macintosh, F. (2005) Greek Tragedy and the British Theatre 1660–1914. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, E., Macintosh, F. and Taplin, O. eds (2000) Medea in Performance, 1500–2000. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, E., Macintosh, F. and Wrigley, A. eds (2010) Dionysus since 69: Greek Tragedy at the Dawn of the Third Millennium. Oxford.Google Scholar
Halliwell, S. (1984) ‘Plato and Aristotle on the denial of tragedy’, P.C.P.S. 30: 4971.Google Scholar
Halliwell, S. (1986) Aristotle’s Poetics. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Hall Sternberg, R. ed. (2005) Pity and Power in Ancient Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hamilton, R. (1978) ‘Prologue, prophecy and plot in four plays of Euripides’, A.J.P. 99: 277302.Google Scholar
Hands, A. R. (1968) Charities and Social Aid in Greece and Rome. London.Google Scholar
Hanink, J. (2014) Lycurgan Athens and the Making of Classical Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hansen, M. H. (1985) Demography and Democracy: The number of Athenian citizens in the fourth century B.C. Herning.Google Scholar
Hansen, M. H. (1987) The Athenian Assembly. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hardwick, L. and Stray, C. eds (2008) A Companion to Classical Receptions. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harrison, E. L. (1964) ‘Was Gorgias a sophist?’, Phoenix 18: 183–92.Google Scholar
Hartman, G. H. (1970) Beyond Formalism. New Haven.Google Scholar
Hartman, G. H. (1975) The Fate of Reading. Chicago.Google Scholar
Hartman, G. H. (1981) Saving the Text: Literature/Derrida/Philosophy. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Hartog, F. (1980) Le Miroir d’Hérodote: essai sur la représentation de l’autre. Paris.Google Scholar
Hartog, F. (2007) Vidal-Naquet: historien en personne. L’homme-mémoire et le moment-mémoire. Paris.Google Scholar
Harvey, A. E. (1957) ‘Homeric epithets in Greek lyric poetry’, C.Q. 7: 206–23.Google Scholar
Haubold, J. (2000) Homer’s People: epic poetry and social formation. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Havelock, E. A. (1978) The Greek Concept of Justice: from its shadow in Homer to its substance in Plato. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Hay, J. (1978) Oedipus Tyrannus: lame knowledge and the homosporic womb. Washington.Google Scholar
Heidegger, M. (1959) An Introduction to Metaphysics. Trans. Manheim, R. New Haven.Google Scholar
Heidegger, M. (1971) Poetry, Language, Thought. Trans. Hofstadter, A. New York.Google Scholar
Heinimann, F. (1945) Nomos und Physis: Herkunft und Bedeutung einer Antithese im griechischen Denken des 5 Jahrhunderts. Basel.Google Scholar
Heinimann, F. (1976) ‘Ein vorplatonische Theorie der τέχνη’, in Classen, ed. (1976): 127–69.Google Scholar
Henderson, Jeffrey (1991) ‘Women and the Athenian drama festivals’, T.A.P.A. 121: 133–47.Google Scholar
Henderson, Jeffrey (2007) ‘Drama and democracy’, in Samons, ed. (2007): 179–95.Google Scholar
Henderson, John (1998) Juvenal’s Mayor: the professor who lived on 2d. a day. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Henrichs, A. (1995) ‘Why should I dance? Choral self-referentiality in Greek tragedy’, Arion 3: 56111.Google Scholar
Hesk, J. (2000) Deception and Democracy in Classical Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hester, D. A. (1971) ‘Sophocles the unphilosophical’, Mnemosyne 24: 1159.Google Scholar
Hirzel, R. (1966) Themis, Dikē, und Verwandtes: ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Rechtsidee bei den Griechen. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Hogan, J. C. (1972) ‘The protagonists of the Antigone’, Arethusa 5: 93100.Google Scholar
Honig, B. (2009) ‘Antigone’s laments, Creon’s grief: mourning, membership, and the politics of exception’, Political Theory 47: 543.Google Scholar
Honig, B. (2010) ‘Antigone’s two laws: Greek tragedy and the politics of humanism’, New Literary History 41: 133.Google Scholar
Honig, B. (2011) ‘Ismene’s forced choice: sacrifice and sorority in Sophocles’ Antigone’, Arethusa 44: 2968.Google Scholar
Honig, B. (2013) Antigone, Interrupted. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Honig, B. (2021) A Feminist Theory of Refusal. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Hopkinson, N. (1984) Callimachus: Hymn to Demeter. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hopman, M. eds (2013) Choral Mediations in Greek Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Howald, E. (1930) Die griechische Tragodie. Munich.Google Scholar
Hume, D. ([1757] 1987) ‘Of tragedy’, in Essays Moral, Political and Literary. Indianapolis: 216–25.Google Scholar
Humphreys, S. (1978) Anthropology and the Greeks. London.Google Scholar
Humphreys, S. (1983) The Family, Women and Death. London.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (1985) The New Comedy of Greece and Rome. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. and Uhlig, A. eds (2017) Imagining Reperformance in Ancient Culture. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jakobson, R. and Halle, M. (1956) The Fundamentals of Language. The Hague.Google Scholar
Jameson, M. H. (1977) ‘Agriculture and slavery in classical Athens’, C.J. 73: 122–45.Google Scholar
Jebb, R. C. (1883–1908) Sophocles: the plays and fragments with critical notes, commentary and translation in English prose. 7 vols. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jones, J. (1962) On Aristotle and Greek Tragedy. London.Google Scholar
Joshel, S. and Murnaghan, S. eds (1998) Women and Slaves in Greco-Roman Culture: differential equations. London and New York.Google Scholar
Just, R. (1975) ‘Conceptions of women in classical Athens’, The Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford 6.3: 153–70.Google Scholar
Kahn, L. (1978) Hermès passe, ou les ambiguïtés de la communication. Paris.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. ed. (2007) A Companion to the Classical Tradition. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kamerbeek, J. C. (1963–84) Sophocles: the plays. 7 vols. Leiden.Google Scholar
Kasimis, D. (2018) The Perpetual Immigrant and the Limits of Athenian Democracy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kells, J. H. (1963) ‘Problems of interpretation in the Antigone’, B.I.C.S. 10: 4764.Google Scholar
Kennedy, G. (1963) The Art of Persuasion in Greece. London.Google Scholar
Kerferd, G. (1950) ‘The first Greek sophists’, C.R. 64: 810.Google Scholar
Kerferd, G. (1981) The Sophistic Movement. Cambridge.Google Scholar
King, H. (1983) ‘Bound to bleed: Artemis and Greek women’, in Cameron, and Kuhrt, (1983): 109–27.Google Scholar
King, K. C. (1980) ‘The force of tradition: the Achilles ode in Euripides’ Electra’, T.A.P.A. 110: 195212.Google Scholar
Kirkwood, G. M. (1958) A Study in Sophoclean Drama. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Kirkwood, G. M. (1965) ‘Homer and Sophocles’ Ajax’, in Classical Drama and its Influence, essays presented to H. D. F. Kitto, ed. Anderson, M. J. London.Google Scholar
Kitto, H. D. F. (1951) The Greeks. London.Google Scholar
Kitto, H. D. F. (1956) Form and Meaning in Drama. London.Google Scholar
Kitto, H. D. F. (1961) Greek Tragedy. London.Google Scholar
Knox, B. M. W. (1952) ‘The Hippolytus of Euripides’, Y.C.S. 13: 331.Google Scholar
Knox, B. M. W. (1957) Oedipus at Thebes. London.Google Scholar
Knox, B. M. W. (1961) ‘The Ajax of Sophocles’, H.S.C.P. 65: 139.Google Scholar
Knox, B. M. W. (1964) The Heroic Temper: studies in Sophoclean tragedy. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Knox, B. M. W. (1971) ‘Euripidean Comedy’, in The Rarer Action, essays in honor of Francis Fergusson, ed. Cheuse, A. and Koffler, R. New Brunswick: 250–74.Google Scholar
Knox, B. M. W. (1977) ‘The Medea of Euripides’, Y.C.S. 25: 198225.Google Scholar
Konstan, D. (1999) ‘The tragic emotions’, Comparative Drama 33: 121.Google Scholar
Konstan, D. (2001) Pity Transformed. London.Google Scholar
Kosak, J. C. (1999) ‘Therapeutic touch and Sophocles’ Philoctetes, H.S.C.P. 99: 93134.Google Scholar
Kosak, J. C. (2005) ‘A crying shame: pitying the sick in the Hippocratic Corpus and Greek tragedy’, in Hall Sternberg, ed. (2005): 253–76.Google Scholar
Kraut, R. (1984) Socrates and the State. Princeton.Google Scholar
Kristeva, J. (1980) Desire in Language: a semiotic approach to literature and art. Trans. and ed. Roudiez, L. S. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kubo, M. (1966) ‘The norm of myth: EuripidesElectra’, H.S.C.P. 71: 1531.Google Scholar
Kuenen-Janssens, L. J. (1941) ‘Some notes on the competence of Athenian women to conduct a transaction’, Mnemosyne 9: 199214.Google Scholar
Kuhns, R. (1962) The House, the City, the Judge. Indianapolis.Google Scholar
Kurke, L. (1998) ‘The cultural impact of democracy’, in Morris, Raaflaub and Castriota, eds (1998): 155–69.Google Scholar
Lacey, W. K. (1968) The Family in Classical Greece. London.Google Scholar
Lape, S. (2010) Race and Citizen Identity in Classical Athenian Democracy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lattimore, R. (1958) The Poetry of Greek Tragedy. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Lear, J. (1988) ‘Katharsis’, Phronesis 33: 297326.Google Scholar
Lebeck, A. (1971) The Oresteia. Washington.Google Scholar
Lefkowitz, M. (1981) The Lives of the Greek Poets. London.Google Scholar
Lefkowitz, M. (1983) ‘Influential women’, in Cameron and Kuhrt (1983): 4964.Google Scholar
Leonard, M. (2005) Athens in Paris: ancient Greek thought and the political in post-war French thought. Oxford.Google Scholar
Leonard, M. (2012) ‘Tragedy and the seductions of philosophy’, C.C.J. 58: 145–64.Google Scholar
Leonard, M. (2015) Tragic Modernities. Cambridge, Mass. and London.Google Scholar
Lesky, A. (1965) Greek Tragedy. Trans. Frankfort, H. A. London.Google Scholar
Levi, A. (1940a) ‘Studies on Protagoras’, Philosophy 15: 147–67.Google Scholar
Levi, A. (1940b) ‘The ethical and social thought of Protagoras’, Mind 49: 284302.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, C. (1966) The Savage Mind. Chicago.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, C. (1969) The Elementary Structures of Kinship. Trans. Bell, J. and Sturmer, J. Chicago.Google Scholar
Liebert, R. (2017) Tragic Pleasure from Homer to Plato. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Linforth, I. M. (1953) ‘Three scenes in Sophocles’ Ajax’, U.C.P.C.P. 15.1: 128.Google Scholar
Linforth, I. M. (1956) ‘Philoctetes: the play and the man’, U.C.P.C.P. 15.3: 95156.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1963) ‘Who is attacked in On Ancient Medicine?’, Phronesis 8: 108–26.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1966) Polarity and Analogy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1979) Magic, Reason and Experience: studies in the origin and development of Greek science. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1983) Science, Folklore and Ideology. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1987) The Revolutions of Wisdom: studies in the claims and practice of ancient Greek science. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Lloyd, M. (1984) ‘The Helen scene in Euripides’ Troades’, C.Q. 34: 303–13.Google Scholar
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1961) ‘Some alleged interpolations in Aeschylus’ Choephoroi and Euripides’ Electra, C.Q. 11: 171–84.Google Scholar
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1971) The Justice of Zeus. Berkeley.Google Scholar
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1972) ‘Tycho von Wilamowitz-Moellendorf on the dramatic technique of Sophocles’, C.Q. 22: 214–28.Google Scholar
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1983) ‘Artemis and Iphigeneia’, J.H.S. 103: 87102.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1981a) L’Invention d’Athènes. Paris.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1981b) Les Enfants d’Athènes. Paris.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1981c) ‘Le lit, la guerre’, L’Homme 21.1: 3767.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1981a) L’Invention d’Athènes: histoire de l’oraison funèbre dans la cité classique. Paris.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1981b) Les Enfants d’Athéna: idées athéniennes sur la citoyenneté et la division des sexes. Paris.Google Scholar
Loraux, N. (1984) The Children of Athena: Athenian ideas about citizenship and the division of the sexes. Trans. Levine, C. Princeton.Google Scholar
Lynn-George, M. (1988) Epos: word and narrative in the Iliad. Atlantic Highlands.Google Scholar
McCabe, C. ed. (1981) The Talking Cure: essays in psychoanalysis and language. London.Google Scholar
McCoskey, D. (1998) ‘“I whom she detested so bitterly”: slavery and the violent division of women in Aeschylus’ Oresteia’, in Joshel and Murnaghan eds (1998): 3555.Google Scholar
MacDowell, D. M. (1976) ‘Hybris in Athens’, G. & R. 23: 1431.Google Scholar
McInerney, J. ed. (2014) A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean. Oxford.Google Scholar
MacKay, L. A. (1962) ‘Antigone, Coriolanus and Hegel’, T.A.P.A. 93: 166–74.Google Scholar
Macleod, C. (1982) ‘Politics and the Oresteia’, J.H.S. 102: 124–44.Google Scholar
Macleod, C. (1983) Collected Essays. Oxford.Google Scholar
Manville, B. (1980) ‘Solon’s law of stasis and atimia in archaic Athens’, T.A.P.A. 110: 213–21.Google Scholar
Marmodoro, A. and Hill, J. eds (2013) The Author’s Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity. Oxford.Google Scholar
Marrou, H. (1956) A History of Education in Antiquity. Trans. Lamb, G. London.Google Scholar
Martindale, C. (1993) Redeeming the Text: Latin Poetry and the Hermeneutics of Reception. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Martindale, C. and Thomas, R. eds (2006) Classics and the Uses of Reception. Oxford.Google Scholar
Mee, E. and Foley, F. eds (2011) Antigone on the Contemporary World Stage. Oxford.Google Scholar
Meier, C. (1993) The Political Art of Greek Tragedy. Trans. Webber, A. Oxford.Google Scholar
Mejer, J. (1979) ‘Recognizing what, when and why’, in Arktouros, eds. Bowersock, G., Burkert, W., and Putnam, M. C. J. Berlin.Google Scholar
Mendelsohn, D. (2002) Gender and the City in Euripides’ Political Plays. Oxford.Google Scholar
Millet, K. (1971) Sexual Politics. New York.Google Scholar
Monteanu, D. (2011) Tragic Pathos: Pity and Fear in Greek Philosophy and Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Moore, J. A. (1977) ‘The dissembling speech of Ajax’, Y.C.S. 25: 4767.Google Scholar
Morris, I., Raaflaub, K. and Castriota, D. eds (1998) Democracy 2500? Questions and challenges. Dubuque.Google Scholar
Moser, S. and Kustas, G. L. (1966) ‘A comment on the “relativism” of the Protagoras’, Phoenix 20: 111–15.Google Scholar
Mosse, C. (1979) ‘Comment s’élabore un mythe politique: Solon père fondateur de la démocratie athénienne’, Annales 34: 425–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Most, G. ed. (1999) Commentaries-Kommentare. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Most, G. and Ozbek, L. eds (2015) Staging Ajax’s Suicide. Pisa.Google Scholar
Muecke, F. (1982) I know you – by your rags”: costume and disguise in fifth-century drama’, Antichthon 16: 1734.Google Scholar
Mueller, M. (2016) Objects as Actors: props and the poetics of performance in Greek tragedy. Chicago.Google Scholar
Musurillo, H. (1967) The Light and the Darkness: studies in the dramatic poetry of Sophocles. Leiden.Google Scholar
Nilsson, M. (1925) A History of Greek Religion. Oxford.Google Scholar
Nooter, S. (2012) When Heroes Sing: Sophocles and the shifting soundscape of tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nooter, S. (2017) The Mortal Voice in the Tragedies of Aeschylus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
North, H. (1966) Sophrosyne: self-knowledge and self-restraint in Greek literature. New York.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, M. (1986) The Fragility of Goodness: Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, M. (2008) ‘The “morality of pity”: Sophocles’ Philoctetes’, in Felski ed. (2008): 148–69.Google Scholar
Nuttall, A. (2001)Why Does Tragedy Give Pleasure? Oxford.Google Scholar
Ober, J. (1989) Mass and Elite: rhetoric, ideology and the power of the people. Princeton.Google Scholar
O’Brien, M. (1964) ‘Orestes and the Gorgon: Euripides’ Electra, A.J.P. 85: 1339.Google Scholar
Onians, R. B. (1951) The Origins of European Thought. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Oranje, H. (1984) Euripides’ Bacchae: the play and its audience. Leiden.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. (1985) Demos: the discovery of classical Attika. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. and Hornblower, S. eds (1994) Ritual, Finance, Politics: Athenian democratic accounts presented to David Lewis. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ostwald, M. (1969) Nomos and the beginnings of Athenian Democracy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ostwald, M. (1973) ‘Was there a concept ἄγoαφος νόμος in Classical Greek?’, in Exegesis and Argument, studies in Greek philosophy presented to Gregory Vlastos, eds. Lee, E. N., Mourelatos, A. P., Rorty, R. M. Assen.Google Scholar
Ostwald, M. (1989) From Popular Sovereignty to the Sovereignty of the Law. Princeton.Google Scholar
Padel, R. (1974) ‘“Imagery of elsewhere”: two choral odes of Euripides’, C.Q. 24: 227–41.Google Scholar
Padel, R. (1992) In and Out of the Mind: consciousness in Greek tragedy. Princeton.Google Scholar
Parker, R. (1983) Miasma: pollution and purification in early Greek religion. Oxford.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. ed. (1988) Characterization and Individuality in Greek Literature. Oxford.Google Scholar
Pelling, C. ed. (1997) Greek Tragedy and the Historian. Oxford.Google Scholar
Pembroke, S. G. (1965) The last of the matriarchs: a study in the inscriptions of Lycia’, Journal of Economic and Social History of the Orient 8: 217–47.Google Scholar
Pembroke, S. G. (1967) ‘Women in charge: the function of alternatives in early Greek tradition and the ancient idea of matriarchy’, Journal of Warburg and Courtauld 30: 135.Google Scholar
Peponi, A. E. (2012) Frontiers of Pleasure: models of aesthetic response in archaic and classical Greek thought. Oxford.Google Scholar
Peradotto, J. (1969) ‘Cledonomancy in the Oresteia’, A.J.P. 90: 121.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (1968) History of Classical Scholarship. Oxford.Google Scholar
Pickard-Cambridge, A. (1968) The Dramatic Festivals of Athens. (Revised by Gould, J. and Lewis, D. M.) Oxford.Google Scholar
Podlecki, A. (1966a) The power of the word in Sophocles’ Philoctetes, G.R.B.S. 7: 233–50.Google Scholar
Podlecki, A. (1966b) The Political Background of Aeschylean Tragedy. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Podlecki, A. (1970) ‘The basic seriousness of Euripides’ Helen’, T.A.P.A. 101: 401–18.Google Scholar
Podlecki, A. (1990) ‘Could women attend the theatre in ancient Athens?’, Ancient World 21: 2743.Google Scholar
Pohlenz, M. (1953) ‘Nomos und Physis’, Hermes 81: 418–38.Google Scholar
Pomeroy, S. B. (1977a) ‘Selected bibliography on women in antiquity’, Arethusa 11: 127–57.Google Scholar
Pomeroy, S. B. (1977b) ‘Technikai kai musikai, A.J.A.H. 2: 5166.Google Scholar
Porter, A. (2016) ‘Compassion in Soranus’ Gynecology and Caelius Aurelianus’ On Chronic Diseases, Studies in Ancient Medicine 45: 285303.Google Scholar
The Postclassicisms Collective, (2020) Postclassicisms. Chicago.Google Scholar
Prauscello, L. (2010) ‘The language of pity: eleos and oiktos in Sophocles’ Philoctetes, C.C.J. 56: 199212.Google Scholar
Prendergast, C. (2019) Counterfactuals: paths of the might have been. London.Google Scholar
Pucci, P. (1977) Hesiod and the Language of Poetry. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Redfield, J. (1975) Nature and Culture in the Iliad: the tragedy of Hector. Chicago.Google Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (1973) ‘Interpolations in Greek tragedy III’, G.R.B.S. 14: 145–71.Google Scholar
Reinhardt, K. (1979) Sophocles. Trans. Harvey, H. and Harvey, D. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J. (2003) ‘Nothing to do with democracy: Athenian drama and the polis, J.H.S. 123: 104–19.Google Scholar
Richlin, A. (2017) Slave Theater in the Roman Republic: Plautus and popular comedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ringer, M. (1998) Electra and the Empty Urn: metatheater and role playing in Sophocles. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Romilly, J. (1973) ‘Gorgias et le pouvoir de la poésieJ.H.S. 93: 155–62.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, M. and Lamphere, L. (1975) Women, Culture and Society. Stanford.Google Scholar
Rosenmeyer, T. (1955) ‘Gorgias, Aeschylus and apate’, A.J.P. 76: 225–60.Google Scholar
Rosenmeyer, T. (1963) The Masks of Tragedy. Austin.Google Scholar
Rosivach, V. (1978) ‘The “Golden Lamb” ode in EuripidesElectra’, C.P. 73: 189–99.Google Scholar
Rosivach, V. (1979) ‘The two worlds of the Antigone’, I.C.S. 4: 1626.Google Scholar
Ross, I. (2013) Oscar Wilde and Ancient Greece. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Roudiez, L. S. (1980) ‘Introduction’, in Kristeva, (1980): 121.Google Scholar
Rousselle, A. (1983) Pomeia: de la maitrise du corps a la privation sensuelle. Paris.Google Scholar
Rudhardt, J. and Reverdin, O. eds. (1981) Le Sacrifice dans l’antiquité. Fondation Hardt, Entretiens sur l’antiquité classique, 27. Geneva.Google Scholar
Russell, D. A. (1983) Greek Declamation. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rutherford, R. (2012) Greek Tragic Style: form, language, interpretation. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ryffel, H. (1949) Metabole Politeion: Der Wandel der Staatsverfassungen. New York.Google Scholar
Saïd, S. (1978) La Faute tragique. Paris.Google Scholar
Saïd, S. (1998) ‘Tragedy and politics’, in Boedeker, and Raaflaub, eds (1998): 275–95.Google Scholar
Sainte-Croix, G. de (1972) The Origins of the Peloponnesian War. London.Google Scholar
Sale, W. (1977) Existentialism and Euripides: sickness, tragedy and divinity in the Medea, the Hippolytus and the Bacchae. Berwick, Victoria.Google Scholar
Samons, L. (2007) The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Pericles. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sansonne, D. (1978) ‘The Bacchae as satyr play?’, I.C.S. 3: 40–6.Google Scholar
Sartre, J.-P. (1973) Politics and Literature. Trans. Underwood, J. A. London.Google Scholar
Schadewaldt, W. (1926) Monolog und Selbstgesprach. Berlin.Google Scholar
Schaps, D. M. (1977) ‘The woman least mentioned: etiquette and women’s names’, C.Q. 27: 323–30.Google Scholar
Schaps, D. M. (1978) The Economic Rights of Women in Ancient Greece. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Schein, S. L. (2001) ‘Herakles and the ending of Sophokles’ Philoktetes, Studi Italiani di Filologia Classica 19: 3852.Google Scholar
Schnapp, A. (1984) ‘Eros en chasse’, in La Cité des images. Paris: 6783.Google Scholar
Seaford, R. (1981) ‘Dionysiac drama and the Dionysiac mysteries’, C.Q. 31: 252–75.Google Scholar
Seaford, R. (1994) Reciprocity and Ritual: Homer and tragedy in the developing city-state. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Seaford, R. (2000) ‘The social function of Greek tragedy: a reply to Jasper Griffin’, C.Q. 50: 3044.Google Scholar
Searle, R. (1983) Intentionality: an essay in the philosophy of mind. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1962a) ‘Gorgias and the psychology of the logos’, H.S.C.P. 66: 99155.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1962b) The Phaeacians and the symbolism of Odysseus’ return’, Arion 1.4:1764.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1964) ‘Sophocles’ praise of man and the conflicts of the Antigone’, Arion 3: 4666.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1965) ‘The tragedy of the Hippolytus: the waters of ocean and the untouched meadow’, H.S.C.P. 70: 117–69.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1967) ‘Transition and ritual in Odysseus’ return’, P.P. 22: 321–42.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1969) ‘Euripides’ Hippolytus 108–12: tragic irony and tragic justice’, Hermes 97: 297305.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1970) ‘Shame and purity in Euripides’ Hippolytus, Hermes 98: 278–99.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1971a) The Theme of the Mutilation of the Corpse in the Iliad. Leiden.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1971b) ‘The two worlds of Euripides’ Helen’, T.A.P.A. 102: 553614.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1972) ‘Curse and oath in Euripides’ Hippolytus’, Ramus 1: 165–80.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1981) Tragedy and Civilization: an interpretation of Sophocles. Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P. (1982) Dionysiac Poetics and Euripides’ Bacchae. Princeton.Google Scholar
Segal, E. ed. (1968) Euripides: a collection of critical essays. Englewood Cliffs.Google Scholar
Segal, E. ed. (1983) Oxford Readings in Greek Tragedy. Oxford.Google Scholar
Seidensticker, B. (1978) ‘Comic elements in Euripides’ Bacchae’, A.J.P. 99: 303–20.Google Scholar
Shaw, M. (1975) The female intruder: women in fifth-century drama’, C.P. 70: 255–66.Google Scholar
Sheer, J. (2011) Polis and Revolution: responding to oligarchy in classical Athens. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Shuttleworth, S. (1984) George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Science: the make-believe of a beginning. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sicherl, M. (1977) ‘The tragic issue in Sophocles’ Ajax’, Y.C.S. 25: 6798.Google Scholar
Silk, M. S. (1974) Introduction in Poetic Imagery. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Silk, M. S. ed. (1996) Tragedy and the Tragic: Greek theatre and beyond. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Silk, M. and Stern, J. (1981) Nietzsche on Tragedy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Silverman, K. (1983) The Subject of Semiotics. New York.Google Scholar
Simon, B. (1978) Mind and Madness in Ancient Greece. Ithaca and London.Google Scholar
Simpson, M. (1969) ‘Sophocles’ Ajax: his madness and transformation’, Arethusa 1: 88103.Google Scholar
Sinclair, T. A. (1976) ‘Protagoras and others: Socrates and his opponents’, in Classen, (1976): 67126.Google Scholar
Sissa, G. (1984) ‘Une virginité sans hymen: le corps féminin en Grèce ancienne’, Annales E.S.C. 6: 1119–39.Google Scholar
Slater, P. (1968) The Glory of Hera. Boston.Google Scholar
Snell, B. (1953) The Discovery of the Mind. Trans. Rosenmeyer, T. Oxford.Google Scholar
Solmsen, F. (1949) Hesiod and Aeschylus. Ithaca.Google Scholar
Solmsen, F. (1967) ‘Electra and Orestes: three recognitions in Greek tragedy’, Med. Konin. Nederl. Akad. van Wet. afd. letterk. n.r. 20.2: 918.Google Scholar
Solmsen, F. (1975) Intellectual Experiments of the Greek Enlightenment. Princeton.Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B. (1939) Ambiguity in Greek Literature. Oxford.Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B. (1975) ‘The serpent and the eagle’, introduction to Aeschylus: the Oresteia trans. Fagles, R. New York: 1397.Google Scholar
Steiner, G. (1961) The Death of Tragedy. London.Google Scholar
Steiner, G. (1984) Antigones. London.Google Scholar
Stewart, D. J. (1976) The Disguised Guest: rank, role and identity in the Odyssey. Lewisburg.Google Scholar
Stone, L. (1977) The Family, Sex, and Marriage in England 1500–1800. London.Google Scholar
Stroud, R. (1971) ‘Greek inscriptions: Theozotides and the Athenian orphans’, Hesperia 40: 280301.Google Scholar
Sutton, D. F. (1971) ‘The relation between tragedies and fourth place plays in three instances’, Arethusa 4: 5572.Google Scholar
Svenbro, J. (1976) La Parole et le marbre: aux origines de la poétique grecque. Lund.Google Scholar
Swift, L. (2010) The Hidden Chorus: echoes of genre in tragic lyric. Oxford.Google Scholar
Tanner, A. (1980) Adultery and the Novel: contract and transgression. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Taplin, O. P. (1977) The Stagecraft of Aeschylus. Oxford.Google Scholar
Taplin, O. P. (1978) Greek Tragedy in Action. London.Google Scholar
Tarkow, T. (1981) ‘The scar of Orestes: observations on a Euripidean innovation’, Rh.M 124: 143–53.Google Scholar
Telò, M. (2018) ‘The boon and the woe: friendship and the ethics of affect in Sophocles’ Philoctetes’, in Telò, and Mueller, eds (2018): 133–52.Google Scholar
Telò, M. (2020) Archive Feelings: a theory of Greek tragedy. Columbus.Google Scholar
Telò, M. and Mueller, M. eds (2018) The Materialities of Greek Tragedy: objects and affect in Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides. London.Google Scholar
Thomson, G. (1941) Aeschylus and Athens. London.Google Scholar
Thomson, G. (1966) Aeschylus: the Oresteia. 2 vols. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Torrance, R. M. (1965) ‘Sophocles: some bearings’, H.S.C.P. 60: 269367.Google Scholar
Tyrrell, W. B. (1984) Amazons: a study in Athenian mythmaking. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Tzanetou, A. (2012) City of Suppliants: tragedy and the Athenian Empire. Austin.Google Scholar
Uhlig, A. (2019)Theatrical Re-enactment in Pindar and Aeschylus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Van der Plas, M. (2020) ‘Corpse mutilation in the Iliad’, C.Q . 70: 459–72.Google Scholar
Vandvik, E. (1942) ‘Ajax the insane’, S.O. suppl. 11: 169–75.Google Scholar
Vasunia, P. ed. (2021) The Politics of Form in Greek Literature. London.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1965) Mythe et pensée chez les Grecs. Paris, ed.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1968) Problèmes de la guerre en Grèce ancienne. Paris.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1980) Myth and Society in Ancient Greece, trans. Lloyd, J. Brighton.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1983) Myth and Thought among the Greeks. London.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. (1985) ‘Le Dionysos masque des Bacchants d’Euripide’, L’Homme 93: 3158.Google Scholar
Vernant, J.-P. and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1981) Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece. Trans. Lloyd, J. Brighton.Google Scholar
Vernant, J-P. and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1986) Mythe et tragédie deux. Paris.Google Scholar
Verrall, A. W. (1889) The Agamemnon of Aeschylus. London.Google Scholar
Versenyi, L. (1962) ‘Protagoras’ man-measure fragment’, A.J.P. 83: 178–84.Google Scholar
Vickers, B. (1973) Towards Greek Tragedy. London.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1968) The Black Hunter and the origin of the Athenian ephebeia’, P.C.P.S. 14: 4964.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1969) ‘Chasse et sacrifice dans l’Orestie d’Éschyle’, P.P. 24: 401–25.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1970) Esclavage et gynécocratie dans la tradition, le mythe, l’utopie. Recherches sur la structure sociale dans l’antiquité classique (Actes du colloque de Caen 25–6 April, 1969). Paris. Trans. in Gordon (1981): 187200.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1974) ‘Les jeunes: le cru, l’enfant grec et le cuit’, in Faire de l’histoire, ed. Le Goff, J. and Nora, P. Paris: 137–68.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1981a) Le Chasseur noir: formes de pensée et formes de societé dans le monde grec. Paris.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1981b) ‘Religious and mythic values of the land and sacrifice in the Odyssey’, in Gordon, (1981): 8094.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1981c) ‘The Black Hunter and the origin of the Athenian ephebeia’ (revised from Vidal-Naquet 1968) in Gordon, (1981): 147–62.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1981d) ‘Recipes for Greek adolescence’ (revised and translated from Vidal-Naquet 1974), in Gordon, (1981): 163–86.Google Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1986) ‘Oedipe entre deux cités: essai sur l’Œdipe à Colone’, in Vernant, and Vidal-Naquet, (1986): 175211.Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1971) The Philosophy of Socrates. Garden City.Google Scholar
Walsh, G. R. (1977) ‘The first stasimon of Euripides’ Electra, Y.C.S. 25: 277–89.Google Scholar
Walton, J. M. (1984) The Greek Sense of Theatre: tragedy reviewed. London.Google Scholar
Whitehead, D. (1986) The Demes of Attica. Princeton.Google Scholar
Whitman, C. H. (1951) Sophocles. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Whitman, C. H. (1974) ‘Sophocles’ Ajax 815–824’, H.S.C.P. 78: 67–9.Google Scholar
Wiersma, S. (1984) ‘Women in Sophocles’, Mnemosyne 37: 2555.Google Scholar
Wigodsky, M. W. (1962) ‘The “salvation” of Ajax’, Hermes 90: 149–58.Google Scholar
Wilamowitz, T. von (1969) Die dramatische Technik des Sophokles. Zurich.Google Scholar
Wilcox, S. (1942) The scope of early rhetorical instruction’, H.S.C.P. 53: 121–55.Google Scholar
Wiles, D. (2007) Masks and Performance in Greek Tragedy: from ancient festival to modern experimentation. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Willetts, R. F. (1959) The servile interregnum at Argos’, Hermes 87: 495506.Google Scholar
Willink, C. W. (1968) ‘Some problems of text and interpretation in the Hippolytus’, C.Q. 18: 1143.Google Scholar
Wilson, P. J. (2000) The Athenian Institution of the Khoregia. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wilson, P. J. (2007) The Greek Theatre and Festivals: documentary studies. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wilson, P. and Csapo, E. (2020) A Social and Economic History of the Theatre to 300 BC. Vol 2. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wimsatt, W. K. (1954) The Verbal Icon. Louisville.Google Scholar
Wimsatt, W. K. and Beardsley, M. (1954) ‘The intentional fallacy’, in Wimsatt (1954): 319.Google Scholar
Winkler, J. and Zeitlin, F. eds. (1990) Nothing to Do with Dionysus? Princeton.Google Scholar
Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1948) Euripides and Dionysus: an interpretation of the Bacchae. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1949) ‘Clytemnestra and the vote of Athènes’, J.H.S. 68: 130–47.Google Scholar
Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1960) ‘Hippolytus: a study in causation’, Entretiens sur l’antiquité classique 6: 171–91.Google Scholar
Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1969) ‘Euripides: poietes sophos’, Arethusa 2 : 127–42.Google Scholar
Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1980) Sophocles: an interpretation. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Winnington-Ingram, R. P. (1983) Studies in Aeschylus. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wohl, V. (2002) Love Among the Ruins: the erotics of democracy in classical Athens. Princeton.Google Scholar
Wohl, V. (2015) Euripides and the Politics of Form. Princeton.Google Scholar
Wohl, V. (2018) ‘Stone into smoke: metaphor and materiality in Euripides’ Troades’, in Telò, and Mueller, eds (2018): 116.Google Scholar
Wolff, C. (1968) ‘Orestes’, in Segal, E. ed. (1968): 340–56.Google Scholar
Woozley, J. (1979) Law and Obedience: the arguments of Plato’s Crito. London.Google Scholar
Worman, N. (2020) Tragic Bodies: edges of the human in Greek drama. London.Google Scholar
Wyles, R. (2011) Costume in Greek Tragedy. Bristol.Google Scholar
Wyles, R. (2020) Theatre Props and Civic Identity in Athens 458–405 BC. London.Google Scholar
Zacharia, K. (2003) Converging Truths: Euripides’ Ion and the Athenian quest for self-definition. Leiden.Google Scholar
Zajko, V. and Leonard, M. eds (2006) Laughing with Medusa: classical myth and feminist thought. Oxford.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1965) ‘The motif of the corrupted sacrifice in Aeschylus’ Oresteia’, T.A.P.A. 96: 463505.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1970) ‘The Argive festival of Hera and Euripides’ Electra’, T.A.P.A. 101: 645–69.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1978) ‘Dynamics of misogyny in the Oresteia, Arethusa 11: 149–84.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1980) ‘The closet of masks: role-playing and myth-making in the Orestes of Euripides’, Ramus 9: 6273.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1982a) Under the Sign of the Shield: semiotics and Aeschylus’ Seven against Thebes. Rome.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1982b) ‘Cultic models of the female: rites of Dionysus and Demeter’, Arethusa 15: 129–57.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1985) ‘The power of Aphrodite: Eros and the boundaries of the self in the Hippolytus’, in Directions in Euripidean Criticism, ed. Burian, P. Durham: 52111.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1985) ‘Playing the other: theater, theatricality and the feminine in Greek drama’, Representations 11: 6394.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1986) ‘Thebes: theater of self and other in Athenian drama’, in Euben ed. (1986): 101–41.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1989) ‘Mysteries of identity and designs of the self in Euripides’ Ion, P.C.P.S. 35: 144–97.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1991 ) ‘Euripides’ Hekabe and the somatics of Dionysiac drama’, Ramus 20: 5394.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (1996) Playing the Other: gender and society in classical Greek literature. Chicago.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. (2009) ‘Troy and tragedy: the conscience of Hellas’, in Dill and Walde eds (2009): 709–26.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. ed. (1991) J.-P. Vernant: Mortals and Immortals: collected essays. Princeton.Google Scholar
Zuntz, G. (1958) ‘On Euripides’ Helena: theology and irony’, Entretiens sur l’antiquité classique 6: 201–27.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Simon Goldhill, University of Cambridge
  • Book: Reading Greek Tragedy
  • Online publication: 19 October 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009183055.015
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Simon Goldhill, University of Cambridge
  • Book: Reading Greek Tragedy
  • Online publication: 19 October 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009183055.015
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Simon Goldhill, University of Cambridge
  • Book: Reading Greek Tragedy
  • Online publication: 19 October 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009183055.015
Available formats
×