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Index of Subjects

In: Mythogenesis, Interdiscursivity, Ritual
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Index of Subjects

Achaeans 19–36
Acropolis, and Roman imperial cult 256–275
symbolic significance 259, 269–270, 274
aesthetics 7–8
and philosophy 161–187
and vase-painting 63–70, 76
agriculture, in Greek antiquity 57–58
Ahhiyawans 19–22, 25, 32
aisymnetes 212, 214, 215
Akkadian empire 94–95
Alexandrian editions, of lyric poets 281–300
allegory 226
alphabetization, as editorial criterion 284–285, 289, 299
Anatolia, and Greece, relations 19–47, 82–118
Anchialos 101–102, 107–108
Apatouria 239–241
apoikiai 58–59
arete 338, 330, 332, 339
“aristocracy”, in ancient Greece 57–77, 94, 212–227, 249
concept of, in modernity 443–444, 449
arkteia 238
arrhephoria 238
art, and Plato 161–187
Asia Minor 6–47, 263–264
askēsis 430–453
Assuwa 21–22, 25–26
Assyria 34, 40–41, 45–46, 82–127
asteriskos 289–297, 299
Athens
and Augustan building program 263–273
and Roman imperial worship 255–275
athetesis 290–291
Atlantis 185
avant-garde, European xv, 13–14, 418, 459–471
and Greek antiquity 3–5
Babylon 94, 104, 111, 113
banquets, in art 72, 112–113, 115
base materialism 465, 475
basileus 44, 71–73
beauty, and ancient art (see also kosmos ) 61–62, 70
and philosophy 169–171, 174, 177, 182
in ancient Greek literature 203
in European modernism 468
Bendideia 183
Berlin Painter 88–89
bilingualism, in Phrygia 45
black hunter, motif of 240–242, 248–249
body vs. soul 327–343
Boeotia
dialect of 305, 307, 309–310, 322
stereotypes about 312–313, 317
Bronze Age 19–46
capitalism 430–453
chariots, in vase-painting 68–73
choral poetry 193–196, 198–200, 208
choriambic, meter 287, 297, 314–315
chorus, of maidens 194–195, 197–200, 202, 205–208
citadels, in Asia Minor 21–23, 28–46
city-states, in the Greek Dark Ages (see also polis) 58–59
civil strife/war
in archaic Mytilene 212–227
in Attica 67
in Rome 255, 258, 265
in Thebes 235, 247
in Troy 31
Collège de France 145
colometrization 299–300
“colonization”, in antiquity 58–59, 66–67
comedy, ancient Greek 110, 124–125, 350
communitas 234, 236–238, 244–245
coronis 288, 290–297
crisis, sociopolitical 57–77, 212–227
and ritual 235–238
metaphors for 213–216
curse 221–222, 224, 384
Cyprus 22, 31
Turkish invasion of 398
Dadaism 441, 416, 418, 426, 463, 469
dance, in vase-painting 70, 72
Darius Painter 351
Dark Ages, Greek 6, 57–77
death
and ritual 234–237, 241–242, 246
in philosophy 165–167, 176
deconstruction 460
deformity, topos of, in Greek antiquity 212–213, 216–219
Delphi 40, 46
deme, and initiation rituals 240, 243
dikaiosune 329
discourse, concept of 8, 139–140, 145–146, 153–157
disease, topos of, in Greek antiquity 212–227
dithyramb 194, 284
divine, the
and politics 260–262, 268, 274–275
and the soul 328, 333
world of 75–76, 117–118, 244
dreams
and Plato 172–173
and Surrealism 459
in art 121–122
prophetic 113, 121–122
duty, as ethical value 431, 451, 453
East-West, clash, and Roman empire 261, 265–269
effeminacy, topos of 106–108, 119–121, 125–126
ekdosis 282
ekphora 63
Elamites 112
elegy 117–118, 349–350, 354–355
elite, social, in antiquity 38, 45, 57–77, 213–227
and vase-painting 57–68
in modernity 150, 154–155
enkrateia 329, 335
ephebe 232–251
ephebeia 240
Epic of Gilgamesh 45
epigram(s)
ascribed to Plato 162
Hellenistic 345–355
on Alcman 191
on Sardanapalus 109
epinicium 284, 288, 29–299
epistemology (see also savoir) 139–140
epitaph(s) 345–355
on Alcman 191
on Sardanapalus 110
epithalamia 191–208
and Sappho 195–197, 285, 289, 296
Er, myth of 180–182
ethics and capitalism 430–453
and the concept of the soul 328–343
in Foucault 147–148, 152–153
European Union, debates about 422–424
expiation, in ritual 213
festivals, in ancient Greece 163, 183–184, 186
First Papers of Surrealism 470–471
flâneur 468
formula, in the Homeric epics 412–413, 415
fortification, in Asia Minor ( citadel ) 24–28, 31, 38
funeral, and vase-painting 63–67
Futurism 463–464
gender, and performance culture in antiquity 191–209
gender inversion, and ritual 9, 238–251
genre, and performance in Greek antiquity 191–208
as editorial criterion 284–285, 292
Geometric period, and vase-painting 57–77
gluttony, as theme in antiquity 217, 220
glyconic, meter 286, 297
Gordion 36–46
harmony, cosmic 181–182
Hermopolis 305, 321
hetaireia 213–215, 219–222
heterodoxy 153, 157
heterometria 292, 295–296, 299
hexameter 349, 412, 425
hipponactean, meter 297
“historical a priori”, concept of 138
Hittites 19, 21–26, 28–33
Homeric epics (see also Iliad and Odyssey ) 32–34, 44–46, 62, 70–77, 163–164, 168–169, 172, 177, 186, 219–220, 290–292, 341, 348, 350, 353, 413, 415, 422
horsemen, in vase-painting 66, 70
hymenaios 191
Iliad, and archaeological evidence 33–35
and Midas 40–41, 44–46
translations of 411–427
writing down of 40–41
Imbros 32
imperial worship, in Roman empire 255–275
initiation, rituals of 9, 193, 232–251
inscriptions
and sculpture 7, 84–85, 96–102, 107–110
Assyrian 109, 111, 113, 116, 127
Egyptian 31
in Gordion 43–44
interdiscursivity, concept of 1, 233
Ionia 25, 32–33, 45
justice, in philosophy 164–165, 181, 187, 328–329, 340
in tragedy 243–244
Kallynteria 183, 186
Kleophrades Painter 88
knowledge, and Foucault (see also savoir ) 139–140, 146
kosmos 60–63, 65–67, 76
koureion 239
krobylos 91, 94–95, 117
lament/lamentation 108, 234, 237–238, 248
law
divine 244, 248
in philosophy 165, 172–173, 180, 340
lawagetas 20, 43–45
Lelantine war 67
Lesbos 20, 25–26, 29, 32–34, 156, 212–227
liminality 9, 234–238, 242–244, 247
Linear B, tablets 25, 32, 44
literary history
and scholarly preconceptions 302–323
luxury, as topos 113, 119, 126
Lydia 34, 46, 116, 191, 203
Menippean satire 349–350
metagrammatismos 305
meter, and editorial practices 281–300
migration, in the Bronze Age 34–36, 44
Miletus 24–25, 29–30, 32–34, 289
moral luck, concept of 182
mourning, and vase-painting 63–64, 66
in Plato 178
Muse(s) 163–164, 168, 180
music 5, 154
and feasts 112–113
in Gordion 45
in Plato 173
in vase-painting 68
of the spheres 181
Mycenae (Mycenaeans) 21–26, 30–34, 44, 116
mythogenesis, concept and methodology of 1, 4, 13–14, 383, 459–476
mythology
and history 26, 33, 44–46
and the European avant-garde 4–5, 459–476
Mytilene 212–227
names, connotative function 97–98, 105–111, 126–127
denotative function 97–98, 102, 126
in inscriptions 84–85, 95–102, 97–98, 124, 126
Nazis 469
neoliberalism 430–453
Nineveh 94–95, 102–105, 107–109, 111–116, 127
oath 219–224, 328
ephebic 240–241, 243–244, 248–249
obelos 290–291
objective chance 465, 469
Odyssey 163, 168, 186, 377, 415
oikos 59, 72
Olympieion 271
opera
and ancient Greek tragedy 361, 378
and ancient “Oriental” culture 119, 122–123
ornaments, and vase-painting (see also kosmos) 60–64
orthodoxy, concept of 153, 157
paean 170, 194
painting, and ancient Greek tragedy 361–379
Panathenaea 163, 183–184, 186
papyri, Greek 1–3, 5, 99, 104, 281, 285–286, 288, 290–299, 304–306, 314–315, 318, 320–321
P. Berol. 9722 286
P.Berol. 13284 304–305
P.Colon. inv. 21351+21376 284
P.Oxy. 1233 292–294
P.Oxy. 1360 294
P.Oxy. 1787 284
P.Oxy. 2076 294
P.Oxy. 2438 322
P.Oxy. 2878 296–297
paradigm, concept of 2
paragraphos 288, 291, 293–295
partheneion 192–196, 203–204, 207–208
Parthenon, the 266, 269–271
performance, in antiquity 45–46, 191–208
Persia (Persians) 19, 46, 105, 117, 266–267, 269, 331, 334
pharmakos 212–213, 223
pherecratean, meter 282, 289
phratry 239–240, 243
Phrygia (Phrygians) 19–47, 95, 116
Platonic dialogues, structure of 183
polis 60–74, 76, 213, 216, 248
polymetry 292, 294–295, 297
pouvoir 146
power, concept of 147–147, 155
Pre-Socratic philosophy
and the avant-garde 463, 475
prestige, as a social value 57, 73
Protestantism 431–435, 449, 452
prothesis 63–64, 66–67
psyche 327–343
psychoanalysis 144–145, 158
purification 212–213
reception, anthropology of 8, 137–158
theory of 1, 3–4, 8
reintegration, in ritual 9, 234, 241, 243
religion, and Roman imperial cult 255–275
in the Greek Dark Ages 58–59
rhapsode 163, 168, 170–172
rites of passage 193–195, 197–198, 208, 232–251
ritual 8–10, 156, 212–227
and vase-painting 63–67
failed 221–227, 235–238
in drama 232–251
ritual poetics, concept and methodology of 1, 9, 156, 212, 232–235, 245, 248
Roma, temple of 256, 259, 263–264, 266, 269–271, 274–275
sacrifice 59, 73, 221, 232
savoir 139–141, 146
scapegoat, in Greek antiquity 212–227
scientificity 139–140
sculpture, Assyrian 94, 96, 108, 111–115, 121
Neo-Attic 82–88, 90–94
sea, imagery of 214, 224
Smyrna 25
socioaesthetics, concept and methodology of 1, 463
Song of Release 45
sophia 330
sophrosyne 329, 335
soul
and life 336–337, 341–342
immortality of 337, 341–342
in ancient Greek philosophy 179, 181–182, 327–342
in Homer 336, 340–341
in Xenophon 327–342
transmigration of 119
Sparta, and Roman empire 257, 271
archaic 191–208
sphragis 289
Stoicism 439–440, 453
on the soul 342
stoning 221–224
Structuralism 141–147, 151–152
subject/subjectivity, in philosophy 138–142, 146–147, 151–152
subjectivation 146
Suda 102, 303, 312, 316, 320
Surrealism 459–476
and Greek antiquity 3–5, 459–460, 475
technites 60
Thebes 21, 207, 235–251
The Old English History of the World 118
Thrace, Thracians 35–39
threnos 194
thyrsos 84, 88, 91, 100
Tithonos Painter 88
tradition, concept of 151–152, 156
tragedy, ancient Greek 9, 110, 116, 163, 232–251, 314, 350
reception of 361–379, 382–407
translation, of Plato 169–170, 175
principles 412–418, 427
tropoi 327–328
Troy, excavations in 20, 31
in the Bronze Age 19–47
tumulus 38–39, 46
tyranny (tyrant [tyrannos ]) 212–227, 336, 338, 340
Ugarit 31
utopia, in the Iliad 70–76
vase-inscriptions 1, 97, 109
vase-painting 1–2, 4, 6, 34, 57–70, 236
violence, and vase-painting 65
virtue, in philosophy 181, 329–332, 335–336, 339–340, 435–437, 450
Vita Pindari Metrica 303–304
wanax 20, 43–44
warriors, and vase-painting 63–70, 74
wedding ceremony 193–195, 197–198, 208
wedding songs 191–208

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Mythogenesis, Interdiscursivity, Ritual

Studies Presented to Demetrios Yatromanolakis

Series:  Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, Volume: 354
Cover Mythogenesis, Interdiscursivity, Ritual
E-Book ISBN:
9789004679740
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
02 Aug 2024
  • Subjects
    • Classical Studies
      • Archaeology, Art & Architecture
      • Classical Tradition & Reception Studies
    • History
      • Intellectual History
    • Literature and Cultural Studies
      • Comparative Studies & World Literature
    • Philosophy
      • Aesthetics & Cultural Theory
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
Figures
Abbreviations
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Part 1 Antiquity
Section 1 Archaeology and History of Art
Chapter 1 Trojans and Phrygians between East and West
Chapter 2 Attic Late Geometric Iconography and Homer’s Shield Description
Chapter 3 What’s in a Name: From Ashurbanipal to Sardanapalus
Section 2 Anthropology, Aesthetics, and Antiquity
Chapter 4 Excavating Foucault
Chapter 5 Bee Stung: Plato’s Love of the Poets
Section 3 Ritual, Performance, Poetics, History
Chapter 6 Epithalamia in Alcman
Chapter 7 Pittacus the Scapegoat and the Disease of Mytilene
Chapter 8 Antigone the Ephebe
Chapter 9 The Cult of Augustus in Athens
Section 4 Excavating Texts
Chapter 10 Reconstructing the Alexandrian Editions of Sappho, Alcaeus, and Anacreon
Chapter 11 A “Parochial” Poet in the Making
Chapter 12 Xenophon on the Psyche
Chapter 13 Artemis or Atalanta?
Part 2 Reception Studies
Section 5 Performing the Past
Chapter 14 Curtains for Agamemnon
Chapter 15 Reperforming the Myth of Phaedra in Greece, 1918–2021
Chapter 16 Translator, Poet, Botcher?
Chapter 17 The Aristotelean Ethic and the Spirit of Neoliberalism
Section 6 Mythogenesis
Chapter 18 Surrealism in France and Mythogenesis
Back Matter
Index of Names
Index of Subjects

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