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Featured researches published by Richard G A Buxton.


The Journal of Hellenic Studies | 1980

Blindness and limits: Sophokles and the logic of myth

Richard G A Buxton

To generalize about Aischylos is difficult; to generalize about Euripides is almost impossible; but to generalize about Sophokles is both possible and potentially rewarding. With Sophokles—or, rather, with the Sophokles of the seven fully extant tragedies—we can sense a mood, a use of language, and a style of play-making (‘dramatic technique’) which are largely shared by all seven works. Of these characteristics it is surely the mood which contains the quintessence of Sophoklean tragedy. My aim in the first section of this paper will be to open the way to an appreciation of that mood by following up one of the most important motifs in Sophokles: blindness. In the second section the scope of the enquiry will be widened: I shall show that, in using the blindness motif, Sophokles was drawing on a theme which was fundamental to a large number of mythical narratives told by Greeks from the time of Homer to that of Pausanias, and beyond. In the final section we shall return to Sophokles, placing him this time not against the background of the whole Greek mythical tradition but rather within the specific context of the fifth century B.C., and attempting to overhear the individual dramatic ‘voice’ used by him as he explored the implications of blindness.


Oxford University Press | 2013

Myths and Tragedies in their Ancient Greek Contexts

Richard G A Buxton

ABBREVIATIONS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS INTRODUCTION PART I: THEMES IN MYTH 1. Imaginary Greek Mountains 2. Wolves and Werewolves in Greek Thought 3. Mythological Names: The Case of melas 4. The Myth of Talos: Vulnerability, ichor, and Boundary-Crossing 5. Movement and Stillness: Versions of Medea PART II: MYTHS IN TRAGEDY 6. Tragedy and Greek Myth 7. Time, Space, and Ideology: Tragic Myths and the Athenian Polis 8. Bafflement in Greek Tragedy 9. Blindness and Limits: Sophokles and the Logic of Myth 10. Euripides Alkestis: Five Aspects of an Interpretation 11. Feminized Males in Bakchai: The Importance of Discrimination ENVOI DETAILS OF ORIGINAL PUBLICATION BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX


The Journal of Hellenic Studies | 1992

Imaginary Greek Mountains

Richard G A Buxton


Archive | 2006

Thesaurus Cultus et Rituum Antiquorum

Jc Balty; John Boardman; P Bruneau; Richard G A Buxton; G Camporeale; F Canciani; F Graf; Tonio Hölscher; Lambrinoudakis; E Simon


The Journal of Hellenic Studies | 2013

Junker K. Interpreting the Images of Greek Myths: an Introduction (translated by Annemarie Künzl-Snodgrass and Anthony Snodgrass). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012. Pp. xiv + 225, illus. £55/

Richard G A Buxton


Archive | 2013

95 (hbk); £17.99/

Richard G A Buxton


Archive | 2013

32.99 (pbk). 9780521895828 (hbk); 9780521720076 (pbk).

Richard G A Buxton


Archive | 2013

Feminized Males in Bakchai: The Importance of Discrimination

Richard G A Buxton


Archive | 2012

Movement and Stillness: Versions of Medea

Richard G A Buxton


The Journal of Hellenic Studies | 2011

Mythological Names: The Case of melas

Richard G A Buxton

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