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Oedipus (Seneca)

Oedipus is a fabula crepidata (Roman tragic play with Greek subject) of c. 1061 lines of verse that was written by Lucius Annaeus Seneca at some time during the 1st century AD. It is a retelling of the story of Oedipus, which is better known through the play Oedipus Rex by the Athenian playwright, Sophocles. It is written in Latin.

Oedipus
Oedipus with the bodies of Jocasta and his sons, painting by Oscar-Pierre Mathieu (1871, private collection)
AuthorLucius Annaeus Seneca
CountryRome
LanguageLatin
GenreTragedy
Set inThebes
Publication date
1st century
TextOedipus at Wikisource

Characters

  • Oedipus is the king of Thebes, husband of Jocasta, and he is the supposed son of king Polybus of Corinth. He is the main protagonist of the play.
  • Jocasta is the widow of the former king Laius, wife of Oedipus and sister of Creon.
  • Creon is Jocasta's brother, and the chief aid to Oedipus in Thebes.
  • Tiresias is a blind prophet who is charged by Oedipus to find the killer of King Laius.
  • Manto is the daughter of Tiresias. She is used in the play to describe Tiresias' sacrifice to him, and therefore also to the audience.
  • An Old Man (senex) is a messenger from Corinth who comes to tell Oedipus that Polybus is dead, and reveals part of Oedipus' history to him.
  • Phorbas is an old shepherd who had given Oedipus to the Old Man when Oedipus was a child and who reveals Oedipus' real parentage to him.
  • Messenger (nuntius) is the man who, in Act 5, relates what has become of Oedipus.
  • The chorus are singers that aid the audience in understanding what emotion they should feel after a scene.

Plot

Act One

The play opens with a fearful Oedipus lamenting a vicious plague which is affecting Thebes, the city over which he rules. People are dying in such huge numbers that there are not enough of the living to ensure that each of the victims is cremated. He also mentions a prophecy that he had received from Apollo before he came to Thebes that he would kill his father and marry his mother. He had thus fled the kingdom of his father Polybus. However, Oedipus is so disturbed by what is occurring in Thebes that he even considers returning to his home city. But Jocasta strengthens his resolution, and he stays.

Act Two

Creon returns from the Oracle at Delphi with the instruction that Thebes is required to avenge the death of the former King Laius if the citywide plague is to end. Oedipus utters an ironic curse on the yet unrevealed killer, wishing for him "the crimes that I have fled from". The prophet Tiresias appears and is asked by Oedipus to make clear the meaning of the oracle. Tiresias then proceeds to carry out a sacrifice, which contains a number of horrific signs. As Tiresias does not have the name of King Laius' killer, he proposes to summon Laius' spirit back from Erebus to learn the identity of the guilty one.

Act Three

Creon returns from seeing Tiresias after he has spoken to Laius' ghost, but is unwilling to reveal to Oedipus the killer's name. Oedipus threatens him, and then Creon relents. He says Laius accuses the king of having blood on his hands, and who "has defiled his father's marriage-bed". He goes on to say that Laius promises the plague will cease if the king is expelled from Thebes. Creon advises Oedipus to abdicate, but Oedipus believes that he has invented this story, along with Tiresias, in order to seize his throne. Despite Creon's protestations of innocence, Oedipus has him arrested.

Act Four

Oedipus is troubled by the faint memory of a man whom he had killed on the road for behaving arrogantly before him while Oedipus was travelling to Thebes. An elderly messenger comes from Corinth to tell Oedipus that his father King Polybus has died and for him to come and take his throne. Oedipus does not want to return as he still fears the prophecy that he will marry his mother. The messenger then tells him that Corinth's queen is not his mother, and that he was given Oedipus as a baby on mount Cithaeron. Oedipus then learns, after threatening the shepherd that gave him away, that he is in fact Jocasta's son.

Act Five

A messenger relays the news that Oedipus contemplated suicide and wanted his body flung to wild beasts; but then Oedipus decided that his crime deserved something even more horrible, on account of the suffering Thebes has endured. He resolved to find a slow death for himself. He craved a punishment in which he would neither "join the number of the dead nor dwell among the living". The messenger goes on to explain how Oedipus tore out his eyes with his hands. The chorus question fate, each person's "commanding thread of life", and then hear Oedipus entering. He appears with both eyes removed and is confronted by Jocasta. She realises from his action that she, too, must punish herself for her crimes. While on stage, she takes his sword and kills herself with it.

The role of the chorus

The chorus at the end of Act 1 give an account of the plague, and its development. At the end of Act 2 they give an account of Bacchus, who was the patron god of Thebes. At the end of Act 3 they recount earlier horrific occurrences connected with Thebes. At the end of Act 4, however, they turn more reflective and praise living a life along "a safe middle course" rather than pursuing ambition. They therefore relate the story of Icarus as a parable of a person who flew too high. They do, however, specify that no one is able to alter their fate. This second point is made much more forcefully in their speech in Act 5, where they stress that neither God nor prayer can alter the life that is predestined for the individual. (This view of fate is contrary to the teachings of Stoicism, which hold that fate and divinity are the same. Also, the view of fate as arbitrary, rather than rational and benign, is not part of the Stoic cosmological view.)[1]

Comparison with Sophocles' Oedipus Rex

  • The character of Oedipus in Seneca's play is fearful, "guilt-ridden and open from the beginning to the notion that he may be implicated in the great Theban plague; whereas Sophocles' Oedipus is proud and imperious."[2]
  • Seneca's play has a considerably more violent tone. For example, the sacrifice carried out by Tiresias is described in graphic and gory detail.
  • Sophocles’ play does not contain the character of Manto.
  • In Seneca's play, Oedipus blinds himself before the death of Jocasta by pulling out his eyeballs. In Sophocles’ play, Oedipus blinds himself after seeing the corpse of Jocasta, using golden brooches from her dress to stab out his eyes.
  • In Seneca's play Oedipus is, at best, an aid to the death of Jocasta, and from the ambiguous lines may even have taken her life. In Sophocles’ play, Jocasta hangs herself, and Oedipus subsequently discovers her lifeless body.
  • In Seneca, Laius names his killer. In Sophocles, Oedipus’ guilt emerges gradually throughout the developing play.
  • In Seneca's play there is no mention of Oedipus’ feelings towards his children, whereas in Sophocles’ play Oedipus leaves them to Creon's guardianship and wants to hold them again.
  • Seneca's play ends with Oedipus leaving Thebes, whereas in Sophocles’ Oedipus is told by Creon that his rule is ended.
  • Seneca names the Theban shepherd as Phorbas, whereas Sophocles leaves him nameless.

Translations into English

  • The first translation into English of Oedipus was by Alexander Neville and it appeared in 1563, as well as in Thomas Newton's collection of Seneca's plays, His Tenne Tragedies, in 1581.[3][4]
  • An English translation from Frank Justus Miller's[5] 1938 edition of this work is available online at theoi.com and archive.org.
  • Oedipus is one of the five plays of Seneca chosen and translated by E. F. Watling and published by Penguin Classics in 1966. ISBN 0-14-044174-3
  • The English poet laureate Ted Hughes published a translation of the play in 1969. ISBN 0-571-09223-3
  • In 1999 Professor Michael Rutenberg published his free translation of the play, into which he has placed excerpts from Seneca's moral philosophy. ISBN 0-86516-459-2
  • Fitch, John G., ed. and trans. 2004. Seneca, Tragedies. Vol. 2. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univ. Press.
  • Boyle, Anthony J. 2011. Oedipus, Seneca. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.

Reputation

During the English Renaissance in Elizabethan England, Oedipus, along with Seneca's other plays, was regarded as a model of classical drama.[6] The translator Alexander Neville regarded the play as a work of moral instruction. He said of the play: "mark thou ... what is meant by the whole course of the History: and frame thy lyfe free from such mischiefes".[7] The influential early 20th Century French Theatre critic Antonin Artaud considered Seneca's Oedipus and Thyestes models for his Theatre of Cruelty, originally speaking and writing about Seneca's use of 'the plague' in Oedipus in a famous lecture on 'Theatre and the Plague' given at the Sorbonne (April 6, 1933) and later revised and printed in "Nouvelle Revue Française" (no. 253, 1 Oct. 1934).

In recent times, A. J. Boyle in his book Tragic Seneca: An Essay in the Theatrical Tradition (1997) rejects the criticism of T. S. Eliot that Oedipus, like the other plays of Seneca, is simplistically peopled by stock characters. He says that "In the Oedipus, for example, it is hard to name any stock character except the messenger."[8] The play, particularly with its theme of one's powerlessness against stronger forces, has been described as being as "relevant today in a world filled with repeated horrors against those who are innocent, as it was in ancient times".[9] In 2008, translator Frederick Ahl wrote that in comparison with Sophocles's Oedipus the King, Seneca's version of the myth "is today among the least commonly read of ancient tragedies, largely because the scholarly world regards it as a dull and vastly inferior work".[10]

Performances

Although it is debated whether the play was written for performance in Antiquity,[11] it has been successfully staged since the Renaissance and music for the choruses by Andrea Gabrieli survives from a 1585 production.[12]

On stage

In the cinema

The director Ovliakuli Khodzhakuli made his cinematic debut in 2004 with the Kirghiz language film, Edip, which is based on Seneca's play. Khodzhakuli makes a cameo appearance in the film as King Laius. The principal actors are Anna Mele as Oedipus, and Dzhamilia Sydykbaeva as Jocasta. For a review of the film, see "Ovliakuli Khodzhakuli: Oedipus (Edip), 2004". Kinokultura.com.

Notes and references

  1. ^ Robert John Sklenar (2006). "Seneca, Oedipus 980-993: How Stoic a Chorus?". Camws.org.
  2. ^ Seneca's Oedipus - Review of Seneca's Oedipus
  3. ^ CASE 4
  4. ^ E. F. Watling's Introduction to Seneca: Four Tragedies and Octavia
  5. ^ "Search | RSC Performances | OED198808 - Oedipus Rex | Shakespeare Birthplace Trust". collections.shakespeare.org.uk. Retrieved 2017-07-26.
  6. ^ The Wordsworth Dictionary of Shakespeare by Charles Boyce
  7. ^ Quoted in E. F. Watling's Introduction to Seneca: Four Tragedies and Octavia
  8. ^ Hanna M. Roisman (2003). (PDF). Leeds International Classical Studies. Leeds.ac.uk. 2 (5). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2003-12-04.
  9. ^ About the Book - Oedipus of Lucius Annaeus Seneca - Translated and Adapted by Michael Rutenberg, 1999
  10. ^ Ahl, Frederick (2008). Two Faces of Oedipus: Sophocles' Oedipus Tyrannus and Seneca's Oedipus. Cornell University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0801473975.
  11. ^ Erasmo, Mario. Roman Tragedy: Theatre to Theatricality. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004: pp. 135-7
  12. ^ Printed 1588 and edited by Leo Schrade as La représentation d’Edippo tiranno au Teatro olimpico (Paris, 1960). An excerpt is here.
  13. ^ L210
  14. ^ Liukkonen, Petri. . Books and Writers (kirjasto.sci.fi). Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on 10 October 2008.
  15. ^ Williams, David (1987). Peter Brook : A Theatrical Casebook. London: Methuen. pp. 115–134. ISBN 0413157008.
  16. ^ Staging Oedipus - Oedipus of Lucius Annaeus Seneca - Translated and Adapted by Michael Rutenberg, 1999
  17. ^ Talkin' Broadway Off-Broadway - Oedipus - 6/12/05
  18. ^ BAC s season: Seneca's Oedipus
  19. ^ "Moravian College and Touchston". Lehighvalleylive.com.
  20. ^ Capturing the anguish of fate

Further reading

  • Ahl, Frederick. 2008. Two Faces of Oedipus. Ithaca, NY, and London: Cornell Univ. Press.
  • Braund, Susanna. 2016. Seneca: Oedipus. Bloomsbury Companions to Greek and Roman Tragedy. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Edmunds, Lowell. 2006. Oedipus. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Fitch, John G. 2000. "Playing Seneca?" In Seneca in Performance. Edited by George William Mallory Harrison, 1–12. London: Duckworth.
  • Fitch, John G. 1981. "Sense-Pause and Relative Dating in Seneca, Sophocles and Shakespeare." American Journal of Philology 102:289–307.
  • Hardwick, Lorna. 2009. "Can (Modern) Poets Do Classical Drama? The Case of Ted Hughes." In Ted Hughes and the Classics. Edited by Roger Rees, 39–61. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Henry, Denis, and Brioney Walker. 1983. "The Oedipus of Seneca: An Imperial Tragedy". In Seneca Tragicus: Ramus Essays on Senecan Drama. Edited by A. J. Boyle, 128–139. Berwick, Australia: Aureal.
  • Hine, Harry M. 2004. "Interpretatio Stoica of Senecan Tragedy." In Sénèque le Tragique: Huit Exposés Suivis de Discussions. Edited by Wolf-Lüder Liebermann, et al., 173–209. Geneva, Switzerland: Fondation Hardt.
  • Ker, James. 2009. The Deaths of Seneca. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Mastronarde, Donald J. 1970. "Seneca’s Oedipus: The Drama in the Word." Transactions of the American Philological Association 101:291–315.
  • Poe, Joe P. 1983. "The Sinful Nature of the Protagonist of Seneca’s Oedipus." In Seneca Tragicus: Ramus Essays on Senecan Drama. Edited by A. J. Boyle, 140–158. Berwick, Australia: Aureal.
  • Seo, J. Mira. 2013. "Seneca’s Oedipus, Characterization and Decorum." In Exemplary Traits: Reading Characterization in Roman Poetry. By J. Mira Seo, 94–121. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Staley, Greg. 2014. "Making Oedipus Roman." Pallas 95:111–124.
  • Sutton, Dana Ferrin 1986. Seneca on the Stage. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.
  • Winston, J. 2006. "Seneca in Early Elizabethan England." Renaissance Quarterly 59:29–58.
  • Zwierlein, Otto. 1986. L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.

oedipus, seneca, oedipus, fabula, crepidata, roman, tragic, play, with, greek, subject, 1061, lines, verse, that, written, lucius, annaeus, seneca, some, time, during, century, retelling, story, oedipus, which, better, known, through, play, oedipus, athenian, . Oedipus is a fabula crepidata Roman tragic play with Greek subject of c 1061 lines of verse that was written by Lucius Annaeus Seneca at some time during the 1st century AD It is a retelling of the story of Oedipus which is better known through the play Oedipus Rex by the Athenian playwright Sophocles It is written in Latin OedipusOedipus with the bodies of Jocasta and his sons painting by Oscar Pierre Mathieu 1871 private collection AuthorLucius Annaeus SenecaCountryRomeLanguageLatinGenreTragedySet inThebesPublication date1st centuryTextOedipus at Wikisource Contents 1 Characters 2 Plot 2 1 Act One 2 2 Act Two 2 3 Act Three 2 4 Act Four 2 5 Act Five 3 The role of the chorus 4 Comparison with Sophocles Oedipus Rex 5 Translations into English 6 Reputation 7 Performances 7 1 On stage 7 2 In the cinema 8 Notes and references 9 Further readingCharacters EditOedipus is the king of Thebes husband of Jocasta and he is the supposed son of king Polybus of Corinth He is the main protagonist of the play Jocasta is the widow of the former king Laius wife of Oedipus and sister of Creon Creon is Jocasta s brother and the chief aid to Oedipus in Thebes Tiresias is a blind prophet who is charged by Oedipus to find the killer of King Laius Manto is the daughter of Tiresias She is used in the play to describe Tiresias sacrifice to him and therefore also to the audience An Old Man senex is a messenger from Corinth who comes to tell Oedipus that Polybus is dead and reveals part of Oedipus history to him Phorbas is an old shepherd who had given Oedipus to the Old Man when Oedipus was a child and who reveals Oedipus real parentage to him Messenger nuntius is the man who in Act 5 relates what has become of Oedipus The chorus are singers that aid the audience in understanding what emotion they should feel after a scene Plot EditAct One Edit The play opens with a fearful Oedipus lamenting a vicious plague which is affecting Thebes the city over which he rules People are dying in such huge numbers that there are not enough of the living to ensure that each of the victims is cremated He also mentions a prophecy that he had received from Apollo before he came to Thebes that he would kill his father and marry his mother He had thus fled the kingdom of his father Polybus However Oedipus is so disturbed by what is occurring in Thebes that he even considers returning to his home city But Jocasta strengthens his resolution and he stays Act Two Edit Creon returns from the Oracle at Delphi with the instruction that Thebes is required to avenge the death of the former King Laius if the citywide plague is to end Oedipus utters an ironic curse on the yet unrevealed killer wishing for him the crimes that I have fled from The prophet Tiresias appears and is asked by Oedipus to make clear the meaning of the oracle Tiresias then proceeds to carry out a sacrifice which contains a number of horrific signs As Tiresias does not have the name of King Laius killer he proposes to summon Laius spirit back from Erebus to learn the identity of the guilty one Act Three Edit Creon returns from seeing Tiresias after he has spoken to Laius ghost but is unwilling to reveal to Oedipus the killer s name Oedipus threatens him and then Creon relents He says Laius accuses the king of having blood on his hands and who has defiled his father s marriage bed He goes on to say that Laius promises the plague will cease if the king is expelled from Thebes Creon advises Oedipus to abdicate but Oedipus believes that he has invented this story along with Tiresias in order to seize his throne Despite Creon s protestations of innocence Oedipus has him arrested Act Four Edit Oedipus is troubled by the faint memory of a man whom he had killed on the road for behaving arrogantly before him while Oedipus was travelling to Thebes An elderly messenger comes from Corinth to tell Oedipus that his father King Polybus has died and for him to come and take his throne Oedipus does not want to return as he still fears the prophecy that he will marry his mother The messenger then tells him that Corinth s queen is not his mother and that he was given Oedipus as a baby on mount Cithaeron Oedipus then learns after threatening the shepherd that gave him away that he is in fact Jocasta s son Act Five Edit A messenger relays the news that Oedipus contemplated suicide and wanted his body flung to wild beasts but then Oedipus decided that his crime deserved something even more horrible on account of the suffering Thebes has endured He resolved to find a slow death for himself He craved a punishment in which he would neither join the number of the dead nor dwell among the living The messenger goes on to explain how Oedipus tore out his eyes with his hands The chorus question fate each person s commanding thread of life and then hear Oedipus entering He appears with both eyes removed and is confronted by Jocasta She realises from his action that she too must punish herself for her crimes While on stage she takes his sword and kills herself with it The role of the chorus EditThe chorus at the end of Act 1 give an account of the plague and its development At the end of Act 2 they give an account of Bacchus who was the patron god of Thebes At the end of Act 3 they recount earlier horrific occurrences connected with Thebes At the end of Act 4 however they turn more reflective and praise living a life along a safe middle course rather than pursuing ambition They therefore relate the story of Icarus as a parable of a person who flew too high They do however specify that no one is able to alter their fate This second point is made much more forcefully in their speech in Act 5 where they stress that neither God nor prayer can alter the life that is predestined for the individual This view of fate is contrary to the teachings of Stoicism which hold that fate and divinity are the same Also the view of fate as arbitrary rather than rational and benign is not part of the Stoic cosmological view 1 Comparison with Sophocles Oedipus Rex EditThe character of Oedipus in Seneca s play is fearful guilt ridden and open from the beginning to the notion that he may be implicated in the great Theban plague whereas Sophocles Oedipus is proud and imperious 2 Seneca s play has a considerably more violent tone For example the sacrifice carried out by Tiresias is described in graphic and gory detail Sophocles play does not contain the character of Manto In Seneca s play Oedipus blinds himself before the death of Jocasta by pulling out his eyeballs In Sophocles play Oedipus blinds himself after seeing the corpse of Jocasta using golden brooches from her dress to stab out his eyes In Seneca s play Oedipus is at best an aid to the death of Jocasta and from the ambiguous lines may even have taken her life In Sophocles play Jocasta hangs herself and Oedipus subsequently discovers her lifeless body In Seneca Laius names his killer In Sophocles Oedipus guilt emerges gradually throughout the developing play In Seneca s play there is no mention of Oedipus feelings towards his children whereas in Sophocles play Oedipus leaves them to Creon s guardianship and wants to hold them again Seneca s play ends with Oedipus leaving Thebes whereas in Sophocles Oedipus is told by Creon that his rule is ended Seneca names the Theban shepherd as Phorbas whereas Sophocles leaves him nameless Translations into English EditThe first translation into English of Oedipus was by Alexander Neville and it appeared in 1563 as well as in Thomas Newton s collection of Seneca s plays His Tenne Tragedies in 1581 3 4 An English translation from Frank Justus Miller s 5 1938 edition of this work is available online at theoi com and archive org Oedipus is one of the five plays of Seneca chosen and translated by E F Watling and published by Penguin Classics in 1966 ISBN 0 14 044174 3 The English poet laureate Ted Hughes published a translation of the play in 1969 ISBN 0 571 09223 3 In 1999 Professor Michael Rutenberg published his free translation of the play into which he has placed excerpts from Seneca s moral philosophy ISBN 0 86516 459 2 Fitch John G ed and trans 2004 Seneca Tragedies Vol 2 Cambridge MA Harvard Univ Press Boyle Anthony J 2011 Oedipus Seneca Oxford Oxford Univ Press Reputation EditDuring the English Renaissance in Elizabethan England Oedipus along with Seneca s other plays was regarded as a model of classical drama 6 The translator Alexander Neville regarded the play as a work of moral instruction He said of the play mark thou what is meant by the whole course of the History and frame thy lyfe free from such mischiefes 7 The influential early 20th Century French Theatre critic Antonin Artaud considered Seneca s Oedipus and Thyestes models for his Theatre of Cruelty originally speaking and writing about Seneca s use of the plague in Oedipus in a famous lecture on Theatre and the Plague given at the Sorbonne April 6 1933 and later revised and printed in Nouvelle Revue Francaise no 253 1 Oct 1934 In recent times A J Boyle in his book Tragic Seneca An Essay in the Theatrical Tradition 1997 rejects the criticism of T S Eliot that Oedipus like the other plays of Seneca is simplistically peopled by stock characters He says that In the Oedipus for example it is hard to name any stock character except the messenger 8 The play particularly with its theme of one s powerlessness against stronger forces has been described as being as relevant today in a world filled with repeated horrors against those who are innocent as it was in ancient times 9 In 2008 translator Frederick Ahl wrote that in comparison with Sophocles s Oedipus the King Seneca s version of the myth is today among the least commonly read of ancient tragedies largely because the scholarly world regards it as a dull and vastly inferior work 10 Performances EditAlthough it is debated whether the play was written for performance in Antiquity 11 it has been successfully staged since the Renaissance and music for the choruses by Andrea Gabrieli survives from a 1585 production 12 On stage Edit In the mid 1550s there was a performance of the play in the English city of Cambridge 13 In 1968 Ted Hughes adaptation was staged at the National Theatre in London directed by Peter Brook 14 15 In May 2005 Michael Rutenberg was invited to stage the play by the Department of Theatre at the University of Haifa in Israel He chose to set it in a post nuclear holocaust future 16 Also in 2005 a version based on Hughes translation and which closed with Johnny Nash s I Can See Clearly Now was performed on Broadway by the Theatre By The Blind and directed by Ike Schambelan 17 In 2011 Ted Hughes adaptation was staged at BAC Battersea Arts Centre in London directed by Linda Manfredini 18 MCTC 19 In 2015 Theatre Nisha staged performances in various Indian cities 20 In the cinema Edit The director Ovliakuli Khodzhakuli made his cinematic debut in 2004 with the Kirghiz language film Edip which is based on Seneca s play Khodzhakuli makes a cameo appearance in the film as King Laius The principal actors are Anna Mele as Oedipus and Dzhamilia Sydykbaeva as Jocasta For a review of the film see Ovliakuli Khodzhakuli Oedipus Edip 2004 Kinokultura com Notes and references Edit Robert John Sklenar 2006 Seneca Oedipus 980 993 How Stoic a Chorus Camws org Seneca s Oedipus Review of Seneca s Oedipus CASE 4 E F Watling s Introduction to Seneca Four Tragedies and Octavia Search RSC Performances OED198808 Oedipus Rex Shakespeare Birthplace Trust collections shakespeare org uk Retrieved 2017 07 26 The Wordsworth Dictionary of Shakespeare by Charles Boyce Quoted in E F Watling s Introduction to Seneca Four Tragedies and Octavia Hanna M Roisman 2003 Teiresias the seer of Oedipus the King Sophocles and Seneca s versions PDF Leeds International Classical Studies Leeds ac uk 2 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2003 12 04 About the Book Oedipus of Lucius Annaeus Seneca Translated and Adapted by Michael Rutenberg 1999 Ahl Frederick 2008 Two Faces of Oedipus Sophocles Oedipus Tyrannus and Seneca s Oedipus Cornell University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0801473975 Erasmo Mario Roman Tragedy Theatre to Theatricality Austin University of Texas Press 2004 pp 135 7 Printed 1588 and edited by Leo Schrade as La representation d Edippo tiranno au Teatro olimpico Paris 1960 An excerpt is here L210 Liukkonen Petri Ted Hughes Books and Writers kirjasto sci fi Finland Kuusankoski Public Library Archived from the original on 10 October 2008 Williams David 1987 Peter Brook A Theatrical Casebook London Methuen pp 115 134 ISBN 0413157008 Staging Oedipus Oedipus of Lucius Annaeus Seneca Translated and Adapted by Michael Rutenberg 1999 Talkin Broadway Off Broadway Oedipus 6 12 05 BAC s season Seneca s Oedipus Moravian College and Touchston Lehighvalleylive com Capturing the anguish of fateFurther reading EditAhl Frederick 2008 Two Faces of Oedipus Ithaca NY and London Cornell Univ Press Braund Susanna 2016 Seneca Oedipus Bloomsbury Companions to Greek and Roman Tragedy London and New York Bloomsbury Academic Edmunds Lowell 2006 Oedipus London and New York Routledge Fitch John G 2000 Playing Seneca In Seneca in Performance Edited by George William Mallory Harrison 1 12 London Duckworth Fitch John G 1981 Sense Pause and Relative Dating in Seneca Sophocles and Shakespeare American Journal of Philology 102 289 307 Hardwick Lorna 2009 Can Modern Poets Do Classical Drama The Case of Ted Hughes In Ted Hughes and the Classics Edited by Roger Rees 39 61 Oxford Oxford Univ Press Henry Denis and Brioney Walker 1983 The Oedipus of Seneca An Imperial Tragedy In Seneca Tragicus Ramus Essays on Senecan Drama Edited by A J Boyle 128 139 Berwick Australia Aureal Hine Harry M 2004 Interpretatio Stoica of Senecan Tragedy In Seneque le Tragique Huit Exposes Suivis de Discussions Edited by Wolf Luder Liebermann et al 173 209 Geneva Switzerland Fondation Hardt Ker James 2009 The Deaths of Seneca Oxford Oxford Univ Press Mastronarde Donald J 1970 Seneca s Oedipus The Drama in the Word Transactions of the American Philological Association 101 291 315 Poe Joe P 1983 The Sinful Nature of the Protagonist of Seneca s Oedipus In Seneca Tragicus Ramus Essays on Senecan Drama Edited by A J Boyle 140 158 Berwick Australia Aureal Seo J Mira 2013 Seneca s Oedipus Characterization and Decorum In Exemplary Traits Reading Characterization in Roman Poetry By J Mira Seo 94 121 Oxford Oxford Univ Press Staley Greg 2014 Making Oedipus Roman Pallas 95 111 124 Sutton Dana Ferrin 1986 Seneca on the Stage Leiden The Netherlands Brill Winston J 2006 Seneca in Early Elizabethan England Renaissance Quarterly 59 29 58 Zwierlein Otto 1986 L Annaei Senecae Tragoediae Oxford Oxford Univ Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oedipus Seneca amp oldid 1064412621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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