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Hunting for Justice: The Cosmology of Dike Aeschylus?s OresteiaHunting for Justice: The Cosmology of Dike Aeschylus?s OresteiaHunting for Justice: The Cosmology of Dike Aeschylus?s Oresteia

Hunting for Justice: The Cosmology of Dike Aeschylus?s Oresteia in Vernon, BC

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Current price: $162.95
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Hunting for Justice: The Cosmology of Dike Aeschylus?s Oresteia

Coles

Hunting for Justice: The Cosmology of Dike Aeschylus?s Oresteia in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $162.95
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Size: Hardcover

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A purely political understanding of justice does not convey the cosmological origins of the ancient conception of justice, Dikē, in Aeschylus's . Drawing from Walter Burkert's anthropology of the hunt in , which articulates an ancient cosmology and implies a theory of (tragic) seriousness that parallels Aristotle's naturalist interpretation of tragedy, argues that justice is rooted in predation as exemplified by the Furies. Although the has been read as the passage from the violence of nature to civic justice, Kalliopi Nikolopoulou offers an original interpretation of the trilogy: the ending of the feud is less an instance of political deliberation (as Hegel maintained), and more an instance of nature's necessary halting of its own destructiven'ess for life to resume. Extending to contemporary contexts, she argues that nature's arbitrariness continues to underpin our notions of justice, albeit in a distorted form. In this sense, offers a critique of the political infinitization and idealization of justice that permeates our current discourses of activism and social justice.
A purely political understanding of justice does not convey the cosmological origins of the ancient conception of justice, Dikē, in Aeschylus's . Drawing from Walter Burkert's anthropology of the hunt in , which articulates an ancient cosmology and implies a theory of (tragic) seriousness that parallels Aristotle's naturalist interpretation of tragedy, argues that justice is rooted in predation as exemplified by the Furies. Although the has been read as the passage from the violence of nature to civic justice, Kalliopi Nikolopoulou offers an original interpretation of the trilogy: the ending of the feud is less an instance of political deliberation (as Hegel maintained), and more an instance of nature's necessary halting of its own destructiven'ess for life to resume. Extending to contemporary contexts, she argues that nature's arbitrariness continues to underpin our notions of justice, albeit in a distorted form. In this sense, offers a critique of the political infinitization and idealization of justice that permeates our current discourses of activism and social justice.

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