Includes bibliographical references (pages 435-454) and indexes.
0.1. General. 0.2. Aidos and Emotion. 0.3. Shame and Guilt. 0.4. Shame-Culture and Guilt-Culture -- 1. Aidos in Homer. 1.1. How Things Look and What People Say. 1.2. Aidos in Battle. 1.3. Aidos towards Others: The Cement of Homeric Society. 1.4. Aidos, Women, and Sex. 1.5. Aidos, 'Intelligence', and Excess. 1.6. Other Terms. 1.7. Conclusion -- 2. From Hesiod to the Fifth Century. 2.1. Hesiod. 2.2. The Homeric Hymns. 2.3. Elegiac and Iambic Poets. 2.4. Pindar -- 3. Aeschylus. 3.1. General. 3.2. Crucial Passages. 3.3. The Rejection of Aidos. 3.4. Aidos and Sebas -- 4. Sophocles. 4.1. General. 4.2. Ajax, Electra, Philoctetes -- 5. Euripides. 5.1. Personal Honour and Status. 5.2. Friends, Suppliants, and Guests. 5.3. Honour, Reputation, Retrospective Shame, and Guilt.
5.4. Sexuality and the Sexes. 5.5. The Importance of Aidos -- 6. The Sophists, Plato, and Aristotle. 6.1. Conscience and the Ordinary Athenian. 6.2. Protagoras and Moral Education. 6.3. Doing Wrong in Secret: Or Shame-Culture versus Guilt-Culture. 6.4. Plato. 6.5. Aristotle -- Index of Principal Passages.
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Aidōs.
Aidōs (The Greek word)
Ethics in literature.
Greek literature-- History and criticism.
Honor in literature.
Psychology in literature.
Shame in literature.
Literature-- greek.
Literature-- history.
Greek literature-- History and criticism.
Aidōs (Le mot grec)
Honneur dans la littérature.
Honte dans la littérature.
Littérature grecque-- Histoire et critique.
Morale dans la littérature.
Psychologie dans la littérature.
Aidos (Greek word)
Aidōs (le mot grec)
Aidōs (The Greek word)
Eer.
Ethics in literature.
Ethics in literature.
Greek literature-- History and criticism-- Moral and ethical aspects.
Greek literature-- History and criticism-- Psychological aspects.