Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis

Painful reflections on war are frequent in Euripides’ theatre: the causes and consequences of civil war are often investigated in the extant plays. In particular, the representations of Heracles and Phoenician Women are emblematic. The poet’s large collection of fragments presents isolated passages...

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Main Author: Valentina Caruso
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: University of Ottawa & Laval University 2025-04-01
Series:Cahiers des Études Anciennes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/etudesanciennes/6261
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author Valentina Caruso
author_facet Valentina Caruso
author_sort Valentina Caruso
collection DOAJ
description Painful reflections on war are frequent in Euripides’ theatre: the causes and consequences of civil war are often investigated in the extant plays. In particular, the representations of Heracles and Phoenician Women are emblematic. The poet’s large collection of fragments presents isolated passages on the theme, whose rhetorical analysis nevertheless allows us to reconstruct a significant picture. At the origin of the ἐχθρὰ Στάσις (see fr. 453, 10 Kn.) there is often the social conflict between the arrogant power of the rich and the furious envy of the poor, increased by a distorted conception of values. Oratorical skill can foment or extinguish conflict: its virtuous use therefore becomes an essential virtue for both the citizen and the ruler.
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1923-2713
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publisher University of Ottawa & Laval University
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series Cahiers des Études Anciennes
spelling doaj-art-44fc352bba6b451691fc17c408bc74392025-08-20T03:08:06ZfraUniversity of Ottawa & Laval UniversityCahiers des Études Anciennes0317-50651923-27132025-04-0162Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasisValentina CarusoPainful reflections on war are frequent in Euripides’ theatre: the causes and consequences of civil war are often investigated in the extant plays. In particular, the representations of Heracles and Phoenician Women are emblematic. The poet’s large collection of fragments presents isolated passages on the theme, whose rhetorical analysis nevertheless allows us to reconstruct a significant picture. At the origin of the ἐχθρὰ Στάσις (see fr. 453, 10 Kn.) there is often the social conflict between the arrogant power of the rich and the furious envy of the poor, increased by a distorted conception of values. Oratorical skill can foment or extinguish conflict: its virtuous use therefore becomes an essential virtue for both the citizen and the ruler.https://journals.openedition.org/etudesanciennes/6261Euripidestragedyfragmentary playscivil war
spellingShingle Valentina Caruso
Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis
Cahiers des Études Anciennes
Euripides
tragedy
fragmentary plays
civil war
title Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis
title_full Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis
title_fullStr Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis
title_full_unstemmed Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis
title_short Power, Wealth and Privilege in Euripides’ Representation of stasis
title_sort power wealth and privilege in euripides representation of stasis
topic Euripides
tragedy
fragmentary plays
civil war
url https://journals.openedition.org/etudesanciennes/6261
work_keys_str_mv AT valentinacaruso powerwealthandprivilegeineuripidesrepresentationofstasis