This study addresses the legal status of Medea in the light of the Attic law, taking as reference her characterization in the homonymous tragedy of Euripides. Her legal situation, her conflict with Creon and Jason and the way she involves her children in a reprisal with strong personal motivations are analysed in parallel with the version of the same theme by Seneca. Finally, is made a brief evocation of the personal seclusion of the young Esmeralda, at the end of Victor Hugo’s Notre-Dame de Paris, in which may be detected a possible influence of the characterization of Medea
Medea based on mythological story of Argonauts was a tragedy written in Ancient Greek by Euripides...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
This article offers some thoughts on Seneca\u2019s Medea and especially on lines 905\u201315 near th...
This study addresses the legal status of Medea in the light of the Attic law, taking as reference he...
This study attempts to trace three themes of the Medea-story from Euripides to the 20th century. Fir...
The aim of this paper is not purely philological, but rather to show that Euripides' Medea is a perf...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
This paper investigates appeals to law in Euripides’ Medea, dramatic elements which seem to point to...
The goal of this paper is to examine the traditions of mythic character of Medea, infamous for killi...
The infamous mythological figure of Medea appears in the extant texts of three Silver Age Latin auth...
Our purpose here is threefold: (1) to make an exhaustive study of dramatic suspense itself as genera...
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...
Medea’s powerful ability to inspire and confuse is at the core of this study. The contradiction conc...
Euripides’ Medea remains one of the most abidingly powerful of all Greek tragedies; its themes of lo...
Medea based on mythological story of Argonauts was a tragedy written in Ancient Greek by Euripides...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
This article offers some thoughts on Seneca\u2019s Medea and especially on lines 905\u201315 near th...
This study addresses the legal status of Medea in the light of the Attic law, taking as reference he...
This study attempts to trace three themes of the Medea-story from Euripides to the 20th century. Fir...
The aim of this paper is not purely philological, but rather to show that Euripides' Medea is a perf...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
This paper investigates appeals to law in Euripides’ Medea, dramatic elements which seem to point to...
The goal of this paper is to examine the traditions of mythic character of Medea, infamous for killi...
The infamous mythological figure of Medea appears in the extant texts of three Silver Age Latin auth...
Our purpose here is threefold: (1) to make an exhaustive study of dramatic suspense itself as genera...
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...
Medea’s powerful ability to inspire and confuse is at the core of this study. The contradiction conc...
Euripides’ Medea remains one of the most abidingly powerful of all Greek tragedies; its themes of lo...
Medea based on mythological story of Argonauts was a tragedy written in Ancient Greek by Euripides...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
This article offers some thoughts on Seneca\u2019s Medea and especially on lines 905\u201315 near th...