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“Antigone, After the Fall”

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Notes

  1. Miriam Leonard (2012) ‘Tragedy and the Seductions of Philosophy’, The Cambridge Classical Journal, vol. 58, December 2012, 145–164; James I. Porter (2000), The Invention of Dionysus: An Essay on the Birth of Tragedy, Stanford.

  2. On this point, Jacques Derrida’s essays ‘Signature, Event, Context’ and “Ltd Inc.”, are especially useful, see Derrida (1988) Limited Inc, trans. Samuel Weber and Jeffrey Mehlman (Evanston, Il).

  3. On agonism as an interpretative practice, see Bonnie Honig (2014) “What is Agonism For?” (Contemporary Political Theory, April, 2014).

  4. Page duBois (2010) Out of Athens. The New Ancient Greeks, Cambridge, 178.

  5. duBois delivers on this in her swarm-inspired reading of Aristophanes’ Wasps: “The Democratic Insect: Productive Swarms” in differences, summer-fall 2009 (36–53).

  6. Olga Taxidou (2004) Tragedy, Mourning, Modernity, Edinburgh.

  7. On combat and care as marks of agonism, see Honig (2013) “Feminism as Agonistic Sorority,” Interview, Minnesota Review (102–125).

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Correspondence to Bonnie Honig.

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Honig, B. “Antigone, After the Fall”. Int class trad 21, 326–335 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12138-014-0356-9

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