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Literature and History

Episode 34: The Traditions of Our Forefathers (Euripides' The Bacchae)

Literature and History

Doug Metzger

Literature, Books, History, Classics, Arts

4.91.5K Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2017

⏱️ 126 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

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:
http://literatureandhistory.com/index.php/episode-34-quiz

Episode 34 Transcription:
http://literatureandhistory.com/index.php/episode-034-the-traditions-of-our-forefathers

Episode 34 Song: "Interview with Dionysus"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nxd0jATUZ-s

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Transcript

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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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