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Why Did Antigone Kill Herself?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2009

Abstract

In suggesting an answer to the question which forms the title of this article, Jan Kott seeks relevant connections between the rites of a past civilization and the history of the twentieth century – each age sharing across the millennia the capacity to hate those it chooses to make its victims. Since the publication of his seminal study, Shakespeare Our Contemporary, in 1964, Jan Kott has published in a wide range of fields, always displaying a characteristic combination of critical perception, insight into performance potential, and open sensibility towards the cultures of past and present. Jan Kott has also from the first been an Advisory Editor of Theatre Quarterly as of New Theatre Quarterly. He will be eighty in 1994, and in NTQ40, due for publication in November of that year – as it happens, also the eightieth issue of this journal and its predecessor – we plan a special issue by way of celebration. Although a number of contributions have already been commissioned, further ideas for articles of a kind appropriate to the occasion are welcome.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

Notes

1. Metoikias in the original. The Greek metoikos signified a resident alien without the rights of a citizen. Antigone refers to herself as metoikias. Métèques is a contemptuous French word for all resident aliens, especially those from eastern countries. In Poland after March 1968 the word metek was used for Jews.

2. Translation from the Antigone of Sophocles by Carl R. Mueller and Anna Krajewska-Wieczorek.