Nearly Everything We Think We Know about Greek Tragedy Is Wrong
If Greek tragedies are meant to be so tragic, why do they so often end
so well? Here starts the story of a long and incredible
misunderstanding. Out of the hundreds of tragedies that were performed,
only 32 were preserved in full. Who chose them and why? Why are the lost
ones never taken into account?
This extremely unusual scholarly book tells us an Umberto Eco-like story
about the lost tragedies. By arguing that they would have given a
radically different picture, William Marx makes us think in completely
new ways about one of the major achievements of Western culture. In this
very readable, stimulating, lively, and even sometimes funny book, he
explores parallels with Japanese theatre, resolves the enigma of
catharsis, sheds a new light on psychoanalysis. In so doing, he tells
also the story of the misreadings of our modernity, which disconnected
art from the body, the place, and gods.
Two centuries ago philosophers transformed Greek tragedies into an ideal
archetype, now they want to read them as self-help handbooks, but all
are equally wrong: Greek tragedy is definitely not what you think, and
we may never understand it, but this makes it matter all the more to us.