6533b828fe1ef96bd1289577
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Las cuatro muertes de Cleonice: poder, sexo, violencia y fantasmas
Carmen Sánchez Mañassubject
UNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRASviolencia y fantasmas Sánchez Mañas1135-9560 8276 Studia philologica valentina 536436 2019 21 7225822 Las cuatro muertes de Cleonice: poderpoder [1135-9560 8276 Studia philologica valentina 536436 2019 21 7225822 Las cuatro muertes de Cleonice]but not in Aristodemus. Fantasmas ? Homicidio ? Literatura Griega ? NecromanciaCarmen Greek tradition links the death of regent Pausanias of Sparta with ghosts. In this paper//pages.uv.es/SPhV/cas/numero21.wiki [Ghosts ? Homicide ? Greek Literature ? Necromancy 231 242 https]Plutarch and Pausanias Periegetes. The multiplicity of versions demands a comparative analysisas well as a dissonance between them and Aristodemus. This difference especially affects the narrative treatment of the maidensexowhich we carry out taking into account the three spaces where the narrative action takes place (civic:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]we focus on the well-known episode that revolves around Pausanias himself and a Byzantine maiden and is transmitted by Aristodemusa ghost properly so-called in Plutarch and Pausanias PeriegetesGhosts ? Homicide ? Greek Literature ? Necromancy 231 242 https://pages.uv.es/SPhV/cas/numero21.wikiintimate and ritual spaces). Results indicate a concordance between Plutarch and Pausanias Periegetesdescription
Greek tradition links the death of regent Pausanias of Sparta with ghosts. In this paper, we focus on the well-known episode that revolves around Pausanias himself and a Byzantine maiden and is transmitted by Aristodemus, Plutarch and Pausanias Periegetes. The multiplicity of versions demands a comparative analysis, which we carry out taking into account the three spaces where the narrative action takes place (civic, intimate and ritual spaces). Results indicate a concordance between Plutarch and Pausanias Periegetes, as well as a dissonance between them and Aristodemus. This difference especially affects the narrative treatment of the maiden, a ghost properly so-called in Plutarch and Pausanias Periegetes, but not in Aristodemus.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-01-01 |