Euripides\u27 Medea has been reinvented several times in the twentieth century. This paper uncovers the impetus that informs the lineage of Medeas that are overt in their politicisation of the problems of colonialism and/or institutionalised gender dissymmetry: the Medeas of Pier Paolo Pasolini, Heiner Mller, Brendan Kennelly, Liz Lochhead, Christa Wolf, Diana Wakoski, Tony Harrison - and more recently Wesley Enoch. What, however, lends the Euripidean narrative to such politicisations? To answer this question, the paper looks back to Euripides\u27 play, offering a reappraisal of its representation of infanticide. The paper argues that while this motif is routinely dismissed in the scholarship as a demonising representation of the cultural a...
The aim of this paper is not purely philological, but rather to show that Euripides' Medea is a perf...
Riley Borst Kennesaw State University 1 November 2021 rborst@students.kennesaw.edu “The Oriental Pri...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
Euripides’ Medea has been reinvented several times in the twentieth century. While some modern...
The thesis argues that the representation of divinely sanctioned infanticide in Euripides\u27 Medea ...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
The goal of this paper is to examine the traditions of mythic character of Medea, infamous for killi...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
Abstract—This paper aims at delving into the play Medea in the light of Nietzsche’s views on tragedy...
The Euripidean Medea has been canonized as the de facto standard of all characterizations found with...
The paper explores the conception of space in three ancient plays about Medea: the first one, the Me...
This study attempts to trace three themes of the Medea-story from Euripides to the 20th century. Fir...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
Heiner Müller in the 1980s produced a sequence of plays featuring Euripides’ heroine Mede...
The aim of this paper is not purely philological, but rather to show that Euripides' Medea is a perf...
Riley Borst Kennesaw State University 1 November 2021 rborst@students.kennesaw.edu “The Oriental Pri...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
Euripides’ Medea has been reinvented several times in the twentieth century. While some modern...
The thesis argues that the representation of divinely sanctioned infanticide in Euripides\u27 Medea ...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
The goal of this paper is to examine the traditions of mythic character of Medea, infamous for killi...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
Abstract—This paper aims at delving into the play Medea in the light of Nietzsche’s views on tragedy...
The Euripidean Medea has been canonized as the de facto standard of all characterizations found with...
The paper explores the conception of space in three ancient plays about Medea: the first one, the Me...
This study attempts to trace three themes of the Medea-story from Euripides to the 20th century. Fir...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
Heiner Müller in the 1980s produced a sequence of plays featuring Euripides’ heroine Mede...
The aim of this paper is not purely philological, but rather to show that Euripides' Medea is a perf...
Riley Borst Kennesaw State University 1 November 2021 rborst@students.kennesaw.edu “The Oriental Pri...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...