peer reviewedThis article proposes a study of the speech of Medea in Euripides’ Medea in comparison with the speeches of the other characters of this tragedy. Our purpose is to define, thanks to logometry, the specificities of the speech of Medea: does the heroine speak rather as a woman or as a man? What are the links between discursive characterization and dramatic construction of the character? In this way, we shall try to understand how and why the speeches of Medea and Jason present numerous similarities and which are the consequences on the development of the tragic action of this famous play
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
AbstractThe complexity of Medea's gendering has become one of the most widely explored topics, parti...
Euripides’ Medea remains one of the most abidingly powerful of all Greek tragedies; its themes of lo...
Medea’s powerful ability to inspire and confuse is at the core of this study. The contradiction conc...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
Aristotle’s definition of the tragic hero in his Poetics indicates a contradiction in one of the gre...
This study, relying on the works of Frazer and René Girard, starts from the figure of CEdipus as par...
Our analysis relies at a first stage on the syntactic turns and the adjectives that enable us to dis...
One of the most striking literary female portrayals which we have inherited from the classical world...
This thesis considers Medea, from Euripides’ Medea, in her role as mother, wife, and a Woman of Cori...
Among the modern interpretations of Medea, one of the most influential plays by Euripides, which was...
It is the object of the present study to compare six English versions of the tragedy Medea, by Eurip...
The thesis aims to offer a typology of the various ways in which tragic women conceptualize and perf...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...
AbstractThe complexity of Medea's gendering has become one of the most widely explored topics, parti...
Euripides’ Medea remains one of the most abidingly powerful of all Greek tragedies; its themes of lo...
Medea’s powerful ability to inspire and confuse is at the core of this study. The contradiction conc...
In the last thirty years, Greek tragedy has been increasingly recognized as a ground of moral reflec...
Aristotle’s definition of the tragic hero in his Poetics indicates a contradiction in one of the gre...
This study, relying on the works of Frazer and René Girard, starts from the figure of CEdipus as par...
Our analysis relies at a first stage on the syntactic turns and the adjectives that enable us to dis...
One of the most striking literary female portrayals which we have inherited from the classical world...
This thesis considers Medea, from Euripides’ Medea, in her role as mother, wife, and a Woman of Cori...
Among the modern interpretations of Medea, one of the most influential plays by Euripides, which was...
It is the object of the present study to compare six English versions of the tragedy Medea, by Eurip...
The thesis aims to offer a typology of the various ways in which tragic women conceptualize and perf...
This article examines socio-historical dimensions and cultural and dramaturgic implications of the G...
For a number of years, Euripides\u27 Medea has been explored predominantly by feminist approaches, h...
In 430 BC Greek playwright Euripides transformed the mythological figure of Medea into the proto-typ...