<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Ancient Greek literature / Incest in fiction / Oedipus / Sophocles / Creon / Polynices / Jocasta / Antigone / Eteocles / Greek mythology / Mythological kings / Ancient Greece
Date: 2014-06-29 22:06:08
Ancient Greek literature
Incest in fiction
Oedipus
Sophocles
Creon
Polynices
Jocasta
Antigone
Eteocles
Greek mythology
Mythological kings
Ancient Greece

[removed]Mash-Ups of Classic Plays (Featuring Abba!) | Theater | Los Angeles | Los Angeles News and Events | LA Weekly Mash-Ups of Classic Plays (Featuring Abba!) By Steven Leigh Morris

Add to Reading List

Source URL: antaeus.org

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 1,66 MB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

“vaga per lucos simulacra” The Forest in Seneca’s Oedipus In the Oedipus, Seneca employs words associated with the forest disproportionately to the other tragedies traditionally deemed genuine. At first, the forest

“vaga per lucos simulacra” The Forest in Seneca’s Oedipus In the Oedipus, Seneca employs words associated with the forest disproportionately to the other tragedies traditionally deemed genuine. At first, the forest

DocID: 1syQ6 - View Document

Helen Slaney Liminal’s Kosky’s Hughes’s Artaud’s Seneca’s Oedipus New Voices in Classical Reception Studies IssueLiminal’s Kosky’s Hughes’s Artaud’

DocID: 1sjua - View Document

L Labdacus (Λάϐδακος). Son of Polydorus, king of Thebes, grandson of Cadmus and grandfather of Oedipus. Because he was still a child when his father died, *Nycteus and then *Lycus ruled for him as regents. When

L Labdacus (Λάϐδακος). Son of Polydorus, king of Thebes, grandson of Cadmus and grandfather of Oedipus. Because he was still a child when his father died, *Nycteus and then *Lycus ruled for him as regents. When

DocID: 1saOZ - View Document

Literature / Oedipus / Sophocles / Ted Hughes / 1st millennium BC

New Voices in Classical Reception Studies Issue)

DocID: 1rnjE - View Document

Literature / Fiction / King Lear / Films / British films / Entertainment / Operas / Oedipus Rex / Narratology / Edmund / Oedipus / Cordelia

William Shakespeare’s King Lear and Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex are two classic pieces of literature that are worth studying. This essay will discuss how free will and destiny function in the two plays. First, the plays

DocID: 1rgKb - View Document