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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

SÃcrates Ãpico, trÃgico e cÃmico: um estudo sobre os gÃneros literÃrios no Eutidemo, Banquete e Apologia / Epic, tragic and comic Socrates: a study of literary genres in the Euthydemus, Simposium and Apology

Josà Andrà Ribeiro 18 April 2017 (has links)
nÃo hà / A proposta deste trabalho à fazer uma anÃlise do personagem SÃcrates dos diÃlogos de PlatÃo. O que se pretende mostrar à que esse personagem funde elementos dos gÃneros Ãpico, trÃgico e cÃmico. Pressupomos que SÃcrates à representado como uma espÃcie de herÃi filosÃfico, no qual caracterÃsticas Ãpicas se fundem com uma mÃscara cÃmica, cujas nuanÃas tambÃm trazem uma dramatizaÃÃo trÃgica. Em vista disso, este estudo faz um recorte na relaÃÃo dos diÃlogos com a tradiÃÃo poÃtica, a partir da anÃlise de alguns diÃlogos, que permitiriam traÃar esse sentido do personagem. Em primeiro lugar, o Eutidemo como uma peÃa cÃmica. Em segundo, do carÃter Ãpico de SÃcrates no discurso de AlcibÃades do Banquete. Por fim, uma anÃlise do encontro entre os gÃneros no personagem da Apologia. / The proposal of this work is to provide an analysis of Socrates as a character of Platoâs dialogues. What is meant to show is that this character joins elements of the epic, tragic and comic genres. We assume that Socrates is represented as a kind of philosophical hero, in which epic features merge with a comic mask, whose nuances also bring a tragic dramatization. In view of this, this study identifies the relation of the dialogues with the poetic tradition, from the analysis of some dialogues, which would allow to draw that sense of the character. First, the "Euthydemus" as a comic piece. Second, the epic character of Socrates in the speech of Alcibiades from the Simposium. Finally, an analysis of the encounter between the genres on the character of Apology.

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