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Showing results for : Aeschylus

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Gender Issues Of Aeschylus’s Agamemnon And Euripides's Media
http://www.researchomatic.com/Gender-Issues-Of-Aeschyluss-Agamemnon-And-Euripidess-Media-2291.html

Gender Issues with Medea are some of the following: Nurse tells us that Medea has been a dutiful wife ever since coming to Greece. Medea criticizes the Greek sex-gender system (Denys, 190) Medea claims that childbirth is worse than battle M...

Athens In The Wake Of Their Defeat Of Persia
http://www.researchomatic.com/Athens-In-The-Wake-Of-Their-Defeat-Of-Persia-10528.html

Athens' Dionysian festival became more organized, and Aeschylus began presenting tragedies in 499 BC along with Thespis, Pratinas, Choerilus, and Phrynichus, who was fined for reminding Athenians of their grief for the defeat by the Persian...

Antigone
http://www.researchomatic.com/Antigone-66676.html

the sister—of Oedipus, the mythical king of Thebes who tore out his eyes after discovering that he had unwittingly killed his father and married his own mother, Jocasta. The most famous account of Antigone's story is in Sophocles' Theban tr...

Persae
http://www.researchomatic.com/Persae-57149.html

in his play Persae? How sympathetically does Aeschylus present the Persians in his play Persae? Introduction Like Rodney Dangerfield as Baltimore/D.C. area groups proceed, the Persians got no respect, despite chopping seven singles on ABC-P...

Classical Literature
http://www.researchomatic.com/Classical-Literature-101202.html

Eleusis in 525. He was among the first of the three famous ancient Greek tragedians, Euripides and Sophocles. Their plays are still being read and performed worldwide. He is often referred as the father of tragedy: As Aristotle said, Aesch...

Introduction
http://www.researchomatic.com/Introduction-72163.html

myth in the Athenian state, and on the use of Athenian drama, in particular, as both mirror to and participant in the cultural and political discourse of Athens. Athenian drama was acutely sensitive to the circumstances of its performance t...

Chorus In Athenian Tragedy
http://www.researchomatic.com/Chorus-In-Athenian-Tragedy-47881.html

chorus’, the song-and-dance ensemble, and the so-called first, second, and third actors. The khoros ‘chorus’ in Athenian drama present by vocalising and promenading to the melodious accompaniment of a reed (pipe), while the actors present b...