enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Senecan tragedy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senecan_tragedy

    The first English tragedy, Gorboduc (1561), by Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton, is a chain of slaughter and revenge written in direct imitation of Seneca. (As it happens, Gorboduc does follow the form as well as the subject matter of Senecan tragedy: but only a very few other English plays—e.g.

  3. Revenge play - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenge_play

    The revenge tragedy, or revenge play, is a dramatic genre in which the protagonist seeks revenge for an imagined or actual injury. [1] The term revenge tragedy was first introduced in 1900 by A. H. Thorndike to label a class of plays written in the late Elizabethan and early Jacobean eras (circa 1580s to 1620s).

  4. Revenge tragedy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenge_tragedy

    Revenge tragedy caught their imagination and writers attempted plays of this genre with their own variations of dramaturgy. Shakespeare raised his revenge tragedy to a high intellectual and philosophical level by making Hamlet a virtuous, sensitive scholar. Cyril Tourneur exploited the morbid and melodramatic in The Atheists Tragedy .

  5. List of extant ancient Greek and Roman plays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_extant_ancient...

    Senecan tragedy specifically features a declamatory style, and most of his plays use exaggerations in order to make his points more persuasive. They explored the psychology of the mind through monologues, focusing on one's inner thoughts, the central causes of their emotional conflicts, dramatizing emotion in a way that became central to Roman ...

  6. Category:Plays by Seneca the Younger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Plays_by_Seneca...

    Tragedies written by Lucius Annaeus Seneca, who is also known as Seneca the Younger.Octavia is included in the category, as although it is very probably not by him, [1] it is usually included in collections of Seneca's plays, such as the Penguin Classics book of Seneca's plays, Four Tragedies and Octavia

  7. Titus Andronicus (character) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Andronicus_(character)

    Titus Andronicus is the main character in William Shakespeare's revenge tragedy of the same name, Titus Andronicus. [1] Titus is introduced as a Roman nobleman and revered general. Prior to the events of the play, he dedicated ten years of service in the war against the Goths, losing 21 sons in the conflict. In the opening act, Titus orders ...

  8. Theatre of ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theatre_of_ancient_Rome

    Nine of Seneca's tragedies survive, all of which are fabulae crepidatae; a fabula crepidata or fabula cothurnata is a Latin tragedy with Greek subjects. Seneca appears as a character in the tragedy Octavia, the only extant example of fabula praetexta (tragedies based on Roman subjects, first created by Naevius), and as a result, the play was ...

  9. Thyestes (Seneca) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thyestes_(Seneca)

    Thyestes is a first century AD fabula crepidata (Roman tragedy with Greek subject) of approximately 1112 lines of verse by Lucius Annaeus Seneca, which tells the story of Thyestes, who unwittingly ate his own children who were slaughtered and served at a banquet by his brother Atreus. [1]