The critics who wrote about Hercules Furens are either convinced that the main character is a persecuted, tragic hero, or a self-centered narcissist. The approach taken in this paper corroborates the latter interpretation, but does not focus entirely on Hercules, but also takes into consideration relationships between his heroic self image and other figures, namely, maternal characters of Alcmena, Juno and Megara. Hercules’ grandiosity is revealed not only in his hubristic self-glorification, but also in his fantasies about revenge and suicide, which have particular self-centered character. He is also presented by Seneca as emotionally shallow and unable to reciprocate love. Alcmena functions in the play as an ‘absent mother’, whose...