Alcestis, Euripides - Kiki Gounaridou (essay date 1998)

Kiki Gounaridou (essay date 1998)

SOURCE: Gounaridou, Kiki. “Hypotheses.” In Euripides and Alcestis: Speculations, Simulations, and Stories of Love in the Athenian Culture, pp. 1-24. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 1998.

[In the following excerpt, Gounaridou surveys numerous twentieth-century critical interpretations of the meaning of the Alcestis and concludes that the scholarly indeterminacy she finds reflects the deliberately ambiguous nature of the play.]

HYPOTHESIS I1

Apollo convinced the Fates to allow Admetus, who was condemned to die shortly, to find a voluntary substitute to die in his place. Alcestis, Admetus' wife, offered herself, when neither of the parents wished to die for their child. A short while after this disaster, Heracles visited Admetus' palace and a servant told him what had happened. Heracles went to Alcestis' grave, fought Death away, covered the woman with a veil,...

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