"Euripides" Essays and Research Papers

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    Oedipus and Medea

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    Women were often given roles as complex characters in Greek tragedies. These roles commonly provided insight on the different ways women were viewed in ancient Greek society. Jocasta in Sophocle’s play‚ Oedipus the King and Medea in Euripides’ play Medea are two examples of such characters. Both Jocasta and Medea are represented as tragic female characters as a result of their unfortunate circumstances‚ their loyalty to their husbands and their loss of their children. Jocasta and Medea are both

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    Mrs

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    Honors English 10: 7  22 August 2014  Outline   Thesis: The two Aphorisms here are trying to tell you that your life is short and you need to live it to the fullest  before it is too late.   I. “ It is better to die on your feet that to live on your knees”  A. Euripides   1. Born in Athens‚ Greece‚ around 485 B.C. Married a woman named Meleto and had 3 sons.  His family was most likely a prosperous one; his father was named Mnesarchus or Mnesarchide‚ and his  mother was named Cleito. Was raised in a cultured family

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    Lysistrata. In the late 6th century BC‚ Greek tragedy was one of the most popular and influential forms of drama that was performed in theatres in ancient Greece. The most famous playwrights of the genre were Aeschylus‚ Sophocles‚ and Euripides. Their works were performed for centuries after their initial premiere. Greek tragedy led to Greek comedy and those genres formed the foundation that was based on it all modern

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    Ancient Greek Theatre

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    Tragedy had as an originator‚ Thespis‚ who is considered to be the first Greek actor of tragedy plays. Aristotle’s Poetics say that tragedy originates from dithyrambs which were songs sung in praise of Dionysus at the Dionysia each year. Sophocles‚ Euripides and Aeschylus were three well-known Greek tragedy playwrights. The structure of Greek tragedy consisted of the following: 1. Late point of attack 2. Violence and death offstage 3. Frequent use of messengers to relate information

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    Jealousy Kills

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    Jealousy Kills A common belief in ancient Greece was misogyny which is the fear of women (Pomeroy 90). Misogyny brought about male superiority which will explain the actions of Jason‚ a main character in the story Medea by Euripides. Men in ancient Greece created a society where it was nearly impossible for women to live on their own because they could not get a job to support themselves. Men in ancient times were terrified of the idea of‚ “…a good wife like Deronia can murder her husband. These

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    Theatre

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    THEATRE Theatre a collaborative form of fine art that uses live performers to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place. The performers may communicate this experience to the audience through combinations of gesture‚ speech‚ song‚ music or dance. Elements of design and stagecraft are used to enhance the physicality‚ presence and immediacy of the experience. The specific place of the performance is also named by the word "theatre" as derived from

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    tragedy

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    The Birth Of Tragedy Primitive men did not distinguish between " real " and " virtual ". 1. I reproduce the magic natural phenomenon for smooth operation of the four seasons. 2. The guaranteed and abundance of cruise seasons speak certain God as a person who is young and healthy‚ when God is strong. - That it believed that there is no effect when weakly God (You killed God‚ was elected as the new human God) 3. Festival will open on the day you killed God‚ when that‚ it was a new practice

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    Medea Feminist Analysis

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    for killing her three children in response to her husband’s adulterous actions‚ just as Medea did in the play. Despite being set in different time periods and having a slightly different plot‚ Jules Dassin’s Dream of Passion and Euripides’ Medea are very similar. Euripides’ Medea and Dassin’s Dream of Passion are similar in that they both cast the woman as a complex protagonist. This is done specifically by showing Maia’s transformation in the movie‚ allowing the reader or author to sympathize with

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    claim that the play offers is the fact that she will die for him. Therefore‚ he is relegated to choosing between death and the perfect wife‚ who is perfect because she’ll die for him‚ effectively making the perfect wife impossible to obtain. While Euripides uses a language that appeals in a very direct way to the audience’s emotion‚ these same lines‚ after the play’s happy resolution‚ come across as rather up-played‚ seemingly to the point of satire. He depicts Alcestis weeping at Death’s approach:

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    Xenophon‚ who portrayed Athenian women to be limited to a domestic role where household duties such as cleaning‚ cooking‚ and supervising slaves were primary activities of Athenian women. While on the other side there is Aristophanes‚ Demosthenes‚ Euripides‚ and Sophocles who provide evidence Athenian women did have opportunities to engage in activities outside their domestic roles. Although Athenian women did engage in primarily domestic roles as illustrated by Xenophon‚ evidence shows that Athenian

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