Sophocles\u27 classic tragic drama of a man whose life is dominated by a prophecy that he will kill his father. As a young man he meets, argues with, and slays a man he does not know is his father.https://collected.jcu.edu/plays/1009/thumbnail.jp
My contribution aims to highlight some relationships between Sophocles and Shakespeare starting from...
Tragedy contributes something unique to intersections of the body and language, and this contributio...
The dramatic arts, has through the years, produced notable practitioners in the various ages. A grea...
Sophocles, born in 496 B.C. in Colonus on the outskirts of Athens in Greece, is one of the main anci...
Oedipus Rex, a tragedy created twenty-five centuries ago, is still a source of inspiration for many ...
Abstract: The myth of Sophocles’s Oedipus Rex is revolved on the three interactive perspectives of f...
The understanding of how Greek classical drama originated implies that it is to great extent Sophocl...
Sophocles bases his posthumous Oedipus at Colonus on the famous treatment of the transformation of t...
John Carroll University\u27s Little Theatre Workshop presented Alcestis in Spring of 1980. Euripedes...
Sophocles’ second Oedipus-play clearly relates to the first; it holds, however, a particular place i...
Oedipus Rex is the greatest of the Greek tragedies, a profound meditation on the human condition. Th...
Bearer of an almost unspeakable, immutable fate, Oedipus yet feels himself a man chosen--that is, fa...
The following treatise aims to describe Sophocles\u27 Oedipus Tyrannus as a city-centered tragedy th...
The essay analyses the principle correspondences between the themes of Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus...
Prometheus was the archrebel and archmartyr of Greek mythology. For his championing of humanity, Pro...
My contribution aims to highlight some relationships between Sophocles and Shakespeare starting from...
Tragedy contributes something unique to intersections of the body and language, and this contributio...
The dramatic arts, has through the years, produced notable practitioners in the various ages. A grea...
Sophocles, born in 496 B.C. in Colonus on the outskirts of Athens in Greece, is one of the main anci...
Oedipus Rex, a tragedy created twenty-five centuries ago, is still a source of inspiration for many ...
Abstract: The myth of Sophocles’s Oedipus Rex is revolved on the three interactive perspectives of f...
The understanding of how Greek classical drama originated implies that it is to great extent Sophocl...
Sophocles bases his posthumous Oedipus at Colonus on the famous treatment of the transformation of t...
John Carroll University\u27s Little Theatre Workshop presented Alcestis in Spring of 1980. Euripedes...
Sophocles’ second Oedipus-play clearly relates to the first; it holds, however, a particular place i...
Oedipus Rex is the greatest of the Greek tragedies, a profound meditation on the human condition. Th...
Bearer of an almost unspeakable, immutable fate, Oedipus yet feels himself a man chosen--that is, fa...
The following treatise aims to describe Sophocles\u27 Oedipus Tyrannus as a city-centered tragedy th...
The essay analyses the principle correspondences between the themes of Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus...
Prometheus was the archrebel and archmartyr of Greek mythology. For his championing of humanity, Pro...
My contribution aims to highlight some relationships between Sophocles and Shakespeare starting from...
Tragedy contributes something unique to intersections of the body and language, and this contributio...
The dramatic arts, has through the years, produced notable practitioners in the various ages. A grea...