6533b82ffe1ef96bd1294c4d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Il Dioniso delle "Baccanti" e i "piegatori di pini". Polivalenza di un'immagine leggendaria
Dino Ranieri Scandariatosubject
Louis Gernet"bending the trees" in ancient GreeceEuripides' BacchaeSinihistorical anthropology of ancient Greecepolyvalence des imageroyal identityarboreal imagery in classical AthenDionysuTheseuordealSettore L-FIL-LET/02 - Lingua E Letteratura Grecadescription
This paper investigates the mythical and ritual background of Dionysus’ representation as “fir-bender” in Euripides’ "Bacchae" (ll. 1061 ff.), in an attempt to shed light not only on the dramaturgical aspects of the tragic plot, but also on the cultural categories that make this representation intelligible to the Athenian audience at the end of the fifth century BC. Following Louis Gernet’s historical-anthropological approach based on the notion of "polyvalence des images", this paper aims to define a mythical pattern – the connection between the bending of a tree and the dismemberment of a human victim – already attested in the Attic legend of Theseus and Sinis, in which both characters seem to be ‘specialised’ in bending pine trees. Through a comparative analysis of this mythical dossier it is possible to show how the Euripidean scene of the bending of the fir tree on mount Cithaeron can be interpreted as a tragic resemantisation of mythical ordeals concerning the construction of power and the performance of royal identity in archaic Greece, without necessarily postulating a "passive" reception of the Dionysian imagery or the survival of a remote Frazerian “tree-cult”.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-07-26 |