Fredricksmeyer Masterpieces of Greek Literature

Aeschylus. Agamemnon

Aeschylus 524—456 (supposed death by concussion)

from wealthy Eleusinian family

ca. 90 tragedies of which we have 7 relatively complete, and fragments of others

proudest of his own patriotism—epitaph: “I fought at Marathon” (Greeks as political animals/non-political = idios)

innovations—

added second actor (and then third under influence of Sophocles, as in the Oresteia)

diminished role of chorus (12 members)

increased importance of dialogue

probably invented trilogy

typical features include—

highly dramatic vs. narrative—not what people do, but how they do it

tragedy of tension—long crescendo followed by swift and often brutal denouement

intense interest in crime and punishment (and the workings of divine will and justice)

frequent use of “double motivation”

frequent use of “overdetermination”

elevated style (satirized in Aristophanes)

Agamemnon 458

Diachronic Reading of prologue through line 111 of parodos*, which introduce and begin to develop the trilogy’s central themes, imagery, and so on:

prologue (1-43)

dramatic tension

improper running of oikos

dog simile

light/dark

male/female (light = Ag/dark = Klyt.)

male/female (guard/Klytemnestra)

reversal-she’s like a man

dramatic tension

improper running of oikos

just/unjust

light/dark

dramatic tension

House of Atreus/Curse

improper cuisine

inherited guilt (cycle of violence)

44-111 of parodos

legal terminology

justice of Trojan war

Zeus’ will

yoke

bird imagery-

ethical conflicts

Fury

importance of xenia

male/female

polis (public dispute)/oikos (private dispute)

proper/improper sacrifice

Fate

Fury

male/female

proper/improper sacrifice

tension

Synchronic Reading of 112-end according to categories introduced in 1-111:

dramatic tension

yoke/net/robe/bridle

male/female

light/dark

just/unjust

improper running of oikos

improper exercise of political power

gender-role reversal—tapestry scene; vis-a-vis Aegisthus

duplicity—lying to and feigning loyalty to Agamemnon

dog imagery marks the latter—“watch-dog” vs. “hell-hound” 1

improper sacrifice

murder of Agamemnon

anticipated by images of yoke/net/robe/bridle

anticipated by and marked as an improper sacrifice

yet Agamemnon in some ways unjust, or at least involved in ethical conflicts—

improper sacrifice of Iphigenia

culinary imagery, marked by

bird imagery

sacrificial imagery

overkill at Troy

culinary imagery

bird imagery

polis/oikos—Ag makes private dispute public

tapestry

polygamy

causation (Agamemnon’s death “overdetermined”)

I. divine will

Zeus (xenios)

legal terminology

bird imagery—eagles Artemis (protectress of young things/huntress)

Atê

Peitho

Furies

culinary imagery

bird imagery

II. Fate

III. human will

Agamemnon desires—

Trojan War

polygamy

Klytemnestra avenges—

improper sacrifice of Iphigenia, marked by

bird imagery

sacrificial imagery

Agamemnon’s polygamy

Aegisthus—

avenges crimes against his family

seeks political power

*basic scenes into which tragedies divided:

I. prologue

II. parodos

III. episode 1 (or kommos)

IV. stasimon 1 (or kommos)

strophe-antistrophe-strophe-antistrophe-etc.

episode 2

stasimon 2

etc.

IV. exodos