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Prometheus Bound | Critical Overview
The title character of Prometheus Bound, perhaps more than any other hero, serves scholars as a sort of critical mirror. Reformers, for example, consider Prometheus a revolutionary hero, like Satan, a principled rebel who sacrifices himself for others, like Jesus, or an ethical individual who suffers in the face of absolute power, like Job. Authoritarian critics, on the other hand, understand Prometheus's urge to save humanity but condemn his disregard for hierarchical authority in doing so. Freudian and psychoanalytic critics discuss the play's complicated parent-child relations...
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- Prometheus Bound: Introduction
- Prometheus Bound: Summary
- Prometheus Bound: Aeschylus Biography
- Prometheus Bound: Themes
- Prometheus Bound: Style
- Prometheus Bound: Historical Context
- Prometheus Bound: Critical Overview
- Prometheus Bound: Character Analysis
- Prometheus Bound: Essays and Criticism
- Prometheus Bound: Compare and Contrast
- Prometheus Bound: Topics for Further Study
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