Bacchae Essay, Research Paper
Moral-Social Values in The Bacchae
One prevailing argument about The Bacchae as with many of his other works is whether Euripides propounds a revolutionary or a reactionary message about society. This outlook, however, is skirting an essential element of The Bacchae’s theme. The moral-social values affirmed in Euripedes’ play are political only so far as philosophy itself is political. Euripides investigates the dichotomy between Pentheus and Dionysus. This conflict is used as a medium for commentary on the existing social order and the individual’s relationship to society in terms of a social construct and personal illusion. The antipodal relationship of these concepts defines a singular philosophical outlook that Euripides proposes.
The Bacchae formulates equilibrium between dichotomized elements of humanity. Such a relationship is often looked upon as a natural equilibrium, cited as an internal struggle or the “pendulum” of human philosophical existence. Euripides extends this idea to social commentary. His most powerful tool in this assertion is illusion and social construct. Law, order, and the status quo are the all-encompassing elements of existence. Thus, the obvious repression of women is more important than their human consideration, the acetic soberism of “civil” life takes precedence over emotional demands, and, overall, the needs of an arbitrary construct of a repressive society are more important than the emotional nee
Various comments throughout the play, such as Tiresias’ accusation that many laugh at his celebration of Dionysian ritual, are indicative that the acetic social construct is widely accepted. Those who are not subject to this facade, however, still yield to another illusion.