Overcoming the Fascination with the Barbarian Woman: Contemporary Adaptations of the Medea Myth by Women Writers. Drama.

Details

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State: Public
Version: Author's accepted manuscript
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Serval ID
serval:BIB_E3D1F49F3D34
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Title
Overcoming the Fascination with the Barbarian Woman: Contemporary Adaptations of the Medea Myth by Women Writers. Drama.
Title of the book
Barbarian: Explorations of a Western Concept in Theory, Literature, and the Arts. Vol. II: Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries
Author(s)
Bierl Josephina (co-first)
Publisher
Metzler
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/08/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Series
Schriften zur Weltliteratur/Studies on World Literature
Chapter
6.7.2.
Pages
343–354
Language
english
Abstract
This is the second volume of a two-volume co-authored study that explores the history of the concept of barbarism from the eighteenth century to the present and highlights its foundational role in modern European and Western identity. It constitutes an original comparative and interdisciplinary exploration of the concept’s modern European and Western history and combines overviews with detailed analyses of representative works of literature, art, film, philosophy, and political and cultural theory. Volume 2 broaches figurations of barbarism and mobilizations of the barbarian across diverse contexts, media, and fields from the early twentieth century to our present: from avant-garde manifestoes to contemporary multilingual literature and adaptations of the Medea myth, from anticolonial to eco-socialist texts, from political philosophy and ethno-anthropology to contemporary pop culture, from Russian poetry to Western political rhetoric, from Europe to Latin America, from cinema to art biennials, and from (neo-)Marxists to the Alt-Right.
Keywords
Comparative literature, barbarian, medea, european literature, contemporrary literature
Create date
04/08/2023 15:21
Last modification date
04/08/2023 15:26
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