YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Modern Relevance of Euripides Hecuba
Essays 61 - 90
In seven pages this paper considers the injustices of war in a consideration of women's unequal roles represented in the works of ...
In five pages Euripides' tragedy is examined in terms of how Medea was ultimately corrupted by her desire for power. There are no...
In five pages Jason's characterization as represented by Euripides in his play is examined. There are no other sources listed....
In five pages this paper contrasts and compares these plays by Euripides and Aristophanes in a consideration of the similarities a...
In five pages this paper compares Euripides' character of Medea with the character of Penelope in Homer's 'The Odyssey.' There a...
In four pages this research paper contrasts and compares the portrayal of women and their roles in ancient Greek society as repres...
In four pages this essay contrasts the styles of these Greek playwrights from the classical era within the context of Sophocles'...
In five pages and 2 parts Homer's 'The Iliad' is examines in terms of Patroklos' leadership abilities with a contrast and comparis...
In five pages this paper examines the definition of identity in the works of Euripides, Sophocles, Sappho's poetry, the Oresteia, ...
Medea and Oedipus Rex are like many ancient Greek plays in dealing with a sub-theme of cruelty. This research paper examines the a...
This paper examines how women in Ancient Greek society were portrayed in a comparative analysis of the plays Lysistrata by Aristop...
Thyestes and his brother were rivals for the throne of Mycenae. Atreus was married to Aerope. Thyestes seduced Aerope. He was a...
simply what it is on the outside but cutting into it reveals layers of different contrasts and flavors. The "Foundation" of the Pl...
In a paper consisting of 5 pages this paper examines how women's social roles are depicted in Medea by Euripides and Agamemnon by ...
In 5 pages this paper discusses the barbarian's role in the characterization of Medea in this analysis of the classic tragedy by E...
In three pages this research paper contends that the playwright conceived of Medea as a character that would inspire sympathy in a...
was forbidden to her, period. It was not her place to try to reason why; it was her place to obey without question. This is what w...
In six pages this paper examines the transformation of the epic hero in ancient Greek literary works such as Euripides' Medea, Sop...
This paper consists of five pages with the focus of discussion being Greek mythology particularly as it pertains to the role of wo...
he would take a dim view of Jason abandoning his duty to his wife and children in favor of selfish gain. The chorus would be the...
touch his heart. Various plot complications ensue and the political and social forces that are forcing her father to this awful d...
In ten pages this paper discusses how Euripides' plays depicted Clytemnestra in this consideration of the shift in women's portray...
homes and taking wine, run into the mountains. Two men, the aged prophet Teiresias and King Cadmus, the older monarch who abdicate...
in the following: "Oh be it ours to come to Theseus famous realm, a land of joy! Never, never let me see Eurotas swirling tide, ha...
In reaction, the nurse relates that Medea, "the hapless wife, thus scorned...lies fasting, yielding her body to her grief, wasting...
wine and pleasure, and rejecting the cold and structured nature of Apollonian society. For them, to be human is to follow ones bas...
skills. The walls of Athens are impregnable, but many people live outside these walls, so he gathers them in. They were not keen t...
to Artemis... and not otherwise, we could sail away and sack Phrygia" (Euripides "Iphigenia at Aulis" 358). He writes to his wife...
they were interested in seeing this story play out once again, and that they found meaning in it. It seems logical to assume that ...
Medea would also benefit: "What luckier chance could I have come across than this, An exile to marry the daughter of the king? It ...