This study examines the treatment of physical pain in a selection of classical Greek plays and nineteenth-century Russian novels. The author highlights parallels between these Greek and Russian texts and analyzes how they employ pain to investigate the legitimacy of the state and the justice of the world order.
This study examines the treatment of physical pain in a selection of classical Greek plays and nineteenth-century Russian novels. The author highlights parallels between these Greek and Russian texts and analyzes how they employ pain to investigate the legitimacy of the state and the justice of the world order.
Chapter 1: Prometheus Bound: Punishment Power and Justice Chapter 2: Sophocles' The Women of Trachis: Physical Pain the Hero and the Gods Chapter 3: Sophocles' Philoctetes: Pain Outrage and Justice Chapter 4: Dostoevsky's Notes from the House of the Dead: Corporal Punishment Justice and the State Chapter 5: Pain Truth and History (Injustice) in War and Peace Chapter 6: Pain Truth and Justice: The Death of Ivan Ilyich
Chapter 1: Prometheus Bound: Punishment Power and Justice Chapter 2: Sophocles' The Women of Trachis: Physical Pain the Hero and the Gods Chapter 3: Sophocles' Philoctetes: Pain Outrage and Justice Chapter 4: Dostoevsky's Notes from the House of the Dead: Corporal Punishment Justice and the State Chapter 5: Pain Truth and History (Injustice) in War and Peace Chapter 6: Pain Truth and Justice: The Death of Ivan Ilyich
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