This article revises current perspectives on the generic status, composition, and subject matter of Phoenician Women by Seneca. It adopts a new approach, focusing on selected elements of text organisation. In particular, emphasis is given to the construction of characters and the analogies and contrasts between them which were already of interest to ancient poetics and rhetoric. Moreover, the article refers to observations, accurate but isolated and largely ignored, made by scholars who recognised Seneca’s originality and suggested that his plays might have been inspired by the declamatory tradition and should be read in the context of evolving postclassical literature. By adopting this perspective, it becomes possible to bring toget...
This dissertation analyzes Senecan drama through the malleable figure of the vates, which has the du...
This thesis shows how changes to conventional tragic structure and stories—like the number of acts, ...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College
This article aims to provide a systematic description of Seneca’s approach to the categories of time...
In the following article I present my own concept for interpreting Seneca’s Phaedra, demonstrating t...
Many have debated the possible performance of Seneca\u27s plays. Theatre Historians have polarizing ...
This thesis analyzes the use of vivid descriptive language in Seneca’s tragedy Medea, with an emphas...
Each of the three great Roman tragedians of the Republic, Ennius, Accius and Pacuvius, wrote plays c...
This article examines the character and identity of Seneca's Medea. Focusing on the recognition scen...
The Introduction deals primarily with issues regarding Seneca's Phoenissae specifically, but include...
In this dissertation I study the intertextual relationship between the poetic genres of epic and tra...
Phaedra is a drama of the presentation of human passion, with a focus on depicting how the heroine i...
This dissertation analyzes Senecan drama through the malleable figure of the vates, which has the du...
Phaedra is a drama of the presentation of human passion, with a focus on depicting how the heroine i...
This thesis will compare the role that queens in failing nations, motivated by revenge, play as trag...
This dissertation analyzes Senecan drama through the malleable figure of the vates, which has the du...
This thesis shows how changes to conventional tragic structure and stories—like the number of acts, ...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College
This article aims to provide a systematic description of Seneca’s approach to the categories of time...
In the following article I present my own concept for interpreting Seneca’s Phaedra, demonstrating t...
Many have debated the possible performance of Seneca\u27s plays. Theatre Historians have polarizing ...
This thesis analyzes the use of vivid descriptive language in Seneca’s tragedy Medea, with an emphas...
Each of the three great Roman tragedians of the Republic, Ennius, Accius and Pacuvius, wrote plays c...
This article examines the character and identity of Seneca's Medea. Focusing on the recognition scen...
The Introduction deals primarily with issues regarding Seneca's Phoenissae specifically, but include...
In this dissertation I study the intertextual relationship between the poetic genres of epic and tra...
Phaedra is a drama of the presentation of human passion, with a focus on depicting how the heroine i...
This dissertation analyzes Senecan drama through the malleable figure of the vates, which has the du...
Phaedra is a drama of the presentation of human passion, with a focus on depicting how the heroine i...
This thesis will compare the role that queens in failing nations, motivated by revenge, play as trag...
This dissertation analyzes Senecan drama through the malleable figure of the vates, which has the du...
This thesis shows how changes to conventional tragic structure and stories—like the number of acts, ...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College