In Donna Tartt's novel The Secret History, a group of clever, fastidious preppies in a small liberal arts college on the East Coast reinvent the cult of Dionysus. They brew a concoction of ivy leaves, and embark on the ritual frenzy that culminates in the 'omophagy', a feast of raw flesh to be eaten by initiates. Their experiment is informed by Jane Harrison's researches into the figure of Bacchus and the 'thiasos', his band of ecstatic worshippers. Harrison had read her Nietzsche and set off in pursuit of the 'darker, older' shapes to be glimpsed behind the clear forms of Greek drama and Platonic dialogue.
LRB 21 September 2000 | PDF Download
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