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Euripides - Blog Posts

These Lines Live In My Soul.

These lines live in my soul.


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2 years ago
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.
Not To Me. Not If It’s You.

not to me. not if it’s you.

― Anne Carson (Euripides), Dead Poets Society (Final Script), Extraordinary Attorney Woo (Ep. 10), Anne Carson (H of H Playbook)


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3 months ago

Think about the difference between a classical Greco-Roman statue and a roughly carved wooden mask. The Greco-Roman statue is both realistic and idealizing, rational, and dreamlike. Apollonian. The mask is rough and emotive, messy, affecting us on some level other than our rational mind... Dionysian. Statue = Euripides, Mask = Sophocles

listened to medea today and i gotta say. nietzsche's beef with euripides is truly crazy. like. i mean antigone was a good play but medea was a really good play. seems unambiguously to be an advancement of the art form. also idk, is it really meaningfully more apollonian and less dionysian than previous works. like. i means it not clear what he means by those words basically at all (i see this everywhere glossed as like "order" vs "chaos" and.... maybe that's part of what he means? it's clearly not all of what he means. well actually what he means is "of the nature of the narrative section of the play" and "of the nature of the chorus section of the play" but what that nature is...). medea is calculating but she's clearly passionate, and i feel like the way she takes everything from everyone has a very dionysian feel, the...abandonment of care, the willfullness. idk if this is anything. the chorus IS much more pedestrian and less spooky. so. he's right there

ANYWAY i think the most parsimonious explanation is "nietzsche hates slaves, and doesnt like that theyre portrated as people in this play" (he specifically mentions the centering of slaves as a bad thing! because he thinks it makes the play more pedestrian, i guess? but idk, it throw medea's otherworldliness into sharp relief! if the volume of eveyry character is turned up, you cant hear them in the din)


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1 year ago
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts
Franz Kafka, Letters To Milena // Alain De Botton, Essays In Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts

Franz Kafka, Letters to Milena // Alain de Botton, Essays in Love // Eden Robinson, "Writing Prompts for the Broken-Hearted" // Chloe Liese, Always Only You // Anne Carson and Euripides, An Oresteia // Two—Sleeping At Last // Studio Bones, SK8 the Infinity // Trista Mateer, "is it okay to say this?" // @moodylilac // D. H. Lawrence, "The Rainbow"


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7 months ago
my edit, and imagery credit unknown.
rainer maria rilke, translation by c. f. macintyre, from duino elegies; “the second elegy,”
my edit, and imagery credit unknown.
Medea by Euripides.

DAUGHTER OF LIFE, KNOW YOUR DEATH :

it was not I who loved, yet it was another world I wished for that did. may this rain and day be forever, for tonight only ends in blood and tears of my lost life and brother.

by @to-lamb-to-slaughter (source of image unknown) / rainer maria rilke, translation by c. f. macintyre, from duino elegies; “the second elegy,” / by @to-lamb-to-slaughter (source of image unknown) / medea by euripides


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