This thesis analyses the reception of Sophocles’ Antigone in early modern English drama in the form of translation and adaptation. It focusses on the only two extant texts that can be defined as a translation or an adaptation of Sophocles’ Antigone by English authors in the early modern period: "Sophoclis Antigone" (1581), a Latin translation by Thomas Watson, and "The Tragedy of Antigone, The Theban Princesse" (1631), an English adaptation by Thomas May. Opting for the historicist strand within reception studies, I argue that these two English Antigones intersect at a crossroads of contexts – theoretical, cultural, literary, and political. Only within these perspectives can these plays be fully understood and their value reassessed. Combin...
The dissertation enquires into some of the forms that the reception of ancient Greek tragedy took in...
This dissertation interrogates the role of adaptation in creating and maintaining hegemonic cultural...
Uses adaptation and appropriation studies to explore early modern textual and theatrical metamorphos...
This thesis analyses the reception of Sophocles’ Antigone in early modern English drama in the form ...
Englishing Rome examines early modern English plays set in ancient Rome that interrogate humanist be...
This special issue comprises an editor's introduction, and seven essays addressing the early modern ...
My PhD thesis explores the reception of Sophocles’ Antigone in twentieth-century Europe and focuses...
This study examines the reception and appropriation of Euripides in the English Renaissance, concen...
This thesis investigates the Renaissance reception of Euripides, arguing that Greek tragedy had a di...
Sophocles lives for us only in his works, as Shakespeare does; and very possibly it is for this very...
The dramatic arts, has through the years, produced notable practitioners in the various ages. A grea...
Dramatic Extracting and the Reception of Early Modern English Drama builds on recent work on the tra...
In Shakespeare studies, the term romance is widely understood to refer to a group of plays from th...
My thesis explores how Sophocles′ *Antigone* is reworked in Britain, Ireland, and Turkey in the 21st...
This thesis examines scenes of women’s dialogue in neoclassical tragedies of the English Renaissance...
The dissertation enquires into some of the forms that the reception of ancient Greek tragedy took in...
This dissertation interrogates the role of adaptation in creating and maintaining hegemonic cultural...
Uses adaptation and appropriation studies to explore early modern textual and theatrical metamorphos...
This thesis analyses the reception of Sophocles’ Antigone in early modern English drama in the form ...
Englishing Rome examines early modern English plays set in ancient Rome that interrogate humanist be...
This special issue comprises an editor's introduction, and seven essays addressing the early modern ...
My PhD thesis explores the reception of Sophocles’ Antigone in twentieth-century Europe and focuses...
This study examines the reception and appropriation of Euripides in the English Renaissance, concen...
This thesis investigates the Renaissance reception of Euripides, arguing that Greek tragedy had a di...
Sophocles lives for us only in his works, as Shakespeare does; and very possibly it is for this very...
The dramatic arts, has through the years, produced notable practitioners in the various ages. A grea...
Dramatic Extracting and the Reception of Early Modern English Drama builds on recent work on the tra...
In Shakespeare studies, the term romance is widely understood to refer to a group of plays from th...
My thesis explores how Sophocles′ *Antigone* is reworked in Britain, Ireland, and Turkey in the 21st...
This thesis examines scenes of women’s dialogue in neoclassical tragedies of the English Renaissance...
The dissertation enquires into some of the forms that the reception of ancient Greek tragedy took in...
This dissertation interrogates the role of adaptation in creating and maintaining hegemonic cultural...
Uses adaptation and appropriation studies to explore early modern textual and theatrical metamorphos...