3 sec

Medea's Swerving Flight through Art and Literature Stanford Humanities Center

    • Philosophy

The myth of Medea was not fixed or static, and in this lecture Prof. Taplin will show how Euripides made crucial innovations in his tragedy of 431 BCE. Then by scrutinizing vase-paintings, especially one first published in 1984, and papyrus fragments, especially one first published in 2006, he will reveal how her story was repeatedly varied and re-evaluated during the next 100 years in response to the challenge set by that sensational dramatization.

The myth of Medea was not fixed or static, and in this lecture Prof. Taplin will show how Euripides made crucial innovations in his tragedy of 431 BCE. Then by scrutinizing vase-paintings, especially one first published in 1984, and papyrus fragments, especially one first published in 2006, he will reveal how her story was repeatedly varied and re-evaluated during the next 100 years in response to the challenge set by that sensational dramatization.

3 sec

More by Stanford

The Future of Everything
Stanford Engineering
Stanford Legal
Stanford Law School
Human Behavioral Biology
Robert Sapolsky
Machine Learning
Andrew Ng
Modern Physics: Quantum Mechanics (Winter 2012)
Leonard Susskind
Department of Computer Science
Stanford University