Publication: Aidós, Némesis y el mundo al revés en Eurípides, Med. 410-445
Authors
Morales Ortiz, Alicia
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Publisher
CSIC
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DOI
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
The present article reviews certain passages from Euripides' Medea that emphasize how the
Greek playwriter uses specific concepts of the traditional Greek moral, such as the betrayed
Aidos, the infringement of the díke and the transgression of the nómoi, to form Medea's line
of argument against Jason. It especially focuses on the intervention of the Corinthian women's
choir, in lines 410-455, in the light of Hesiodo and the topic of the world in reverse, represented in the well known image of “Aidós” and “Némesis” abandoning the human world.
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Citation
Emerita, 68, 2
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