Cosmos and Tragedy: An Essay on the Meaning of Aeschylus
By Brooks Otis
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By Brooks Otis
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Otis clarifies the moral and theological issues raised in the Ortesia and relates them to certain stylistic and structural qualities of the three plays. He tackles the central questions of guilt, retribution, and the relation between human and divine justice, and he sees a carefully prepared evolution in the trilogy from a primitive to a more civilized form of justice. Otis treats the trilogy as a poem, a play, and a work of theological and philosophical reflection.
Originally published in 1...
Originally published in 1...























