Self-representation and Illusion in Senecan Tragedy
Oxford University Press

Self-representation and Illusion in Senecan Tragedy

Subjects: Literary studies: classical, early & medieval, Literature
ISBN13: 9780199267613
Published: 01 Oct 2003

Format - Hardback
By Littlewood, C. A. J.

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Regular price A$437.37
Sale price A$437.37 Regular price A$450.90

Self-representation and Illusion in Senecan Tragedy

Regular price A$437.37
Sale price A$437.37 Regular price A$450.90
Product description

C. A. J. Littlewood approaches Seneca's tragedies as Neronian literature rather than as reworkings of Attic drama, and emphasizes their place in the Roman world and in the Latin literary corpus. The Greek tragic myths are for Seneca mediated by non-dramatic Augustan literature. In literary terms Phaedra's desire, Hippolytus' innocence, and Hercules' ambivalent heroism look back through allusion to Roman elegy, pastoral, and epic respectively. Ethically, the
artificiality of Senecan tragedy, the consciousness that its own dramatic worlds, events, and people are literary constructs, responds to the contemporary Stoical dismissal of the public world as mere theatre.

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