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🗓️ 24 January 2017
⏱️ 126 minutes
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Euripides’ The Bacchae, one of the darkest and bloodiest works of Ancient Greek tragedy, is about the spread of cult religions during the late Peloponnesian War.
Episode 34 Quiz:
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Episode 34 Transcription:
http://literatureandhistory.com/index.php/episode-034-the-traditions-of-our-forefathers
Episode 34 Song: "Interview with Dionysus"
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0:00.0 | Literature and is the history dot come. Oh, Hello and welcome to literature and history. |
0:35.0 | Episode 34, The Traditions of Our Forefathers. |
0:40.0 | This show is on Euripides' play, The Bocai, first performed in the city of Athens in 405 |
0:48.0 | B.C. about a year after the playwright's death. |
0:52.0 | The Bocai is often proclaimed Uripetes's masterpiece. |
0:57.2 | It is the eighth and final work of ancient Greek tragedy that will cover, and it's possibly the darkest and most enigmatic of all |
1:06.2 | of them. |
1:08.2 | Eurypides has long been understood as the black sheep of ancient Greek theater. |
1:14.2 | Athenians appreciated his work enough to repeatedly let him compete alongside the less controversial |
1:21.2 | and more orthodox Sophocles, but only very rarely awarded him first prize. |
1:28.7 | There are many reasons that this might have been the case. But in the pages of Euripides' plays that have come down to us from antiquity, |
1:37.0 | we see more chaos, more lack of human agency, |
1:41.0 | and more religious heterodoxy than in the pages of either Escales or |
1:46.9 | Sophocles. |
1:48.9 | Euripides asked questions and |
1:55.0 | were evidently too bleak and too controversial for mainstream Athenian society. |
2:00.0 | To begin the story of the Bock-I, very likely the last play that Euripides ever wrote, |
2:07.0 | we need to talk about its central character. |
2:11.0 | The central character is an ancient Greek god. He may be familiar to you. You've probably heard of him and seen a painting of him. He was one of the oldest Greek deities possibly worshipped even before |
2:26.7 | Zeus himself. Let's talk about how old. A thousand years before Euripides lived and far away on the other side of Greece in the |
2:37.8 | southwestern Peloponnes, there was a settlement that we call Pylos. |
2:43.2 | Before the Bronze Age collapse of the 1100s, B.C. |
... |
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