Aeschylus: Prometheus Bound

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Prometheus Bound is a play beloved of revolutionaries, romantics and rebels, with a fierce optimism tempered by an acute awareness of the compromises, dangers and obsessions of political action. This companion sets the play in its historical context, explores its challenge to authority, and traces its reception from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. Many scholars have disputed its Aeschylean authorship, but it has proved the most influential of tragedies outside academia. Marx's favourite tragedy, Prometheus Bound is also a foundational text for the genre of science fiction through its influence on Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. In its open-eyed celebration of technology and democracy, it is the tragedy for the modern age.

Author(s): Ian Ruffell
Series: Companions to Greek and Roman Tragedy
Publisher: Bristol Classical Press
Year: 2012

Language: English
Pages: 176
City: Bristol

Title Page
Contents
Preface
1 Themes, Contexts and Receptions
2 Gods and Other Monsters
3 Technology and Civilisation
4 Making a Spectacle
5 The Radical Tradition
Abbreviations and Guide to Further Reading
Chronology
Bibliography
Notes
eCopyright