EURIPIDES’ RUPTURE IN TRADITIONAL GREEK TRAGEDIES: AN INFLUENTIAL PLAYWRIGHT IN SHAKESPEARE.
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2016-12-20
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Jaén: Universidad de Jaén
Resumen
This essay deals with the influence of Greek theatre in the renaissance’s tragedy.
Concretely, it is focus on William Shakespeare’s Macbeth.
Firstly, there are some researches where Euripides is distinguish from Greek authors as
Aeschylus and Sophocles, raising some plays of Euripides like Electra, Orestes and Heracles.
Moreover, this essay takes into consideration the repression that those plays had to
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philosophers and the audience in that time. On the one hand, joined features of Euripides and
Shakespeare are analyzed in a tragedy written by the second one: Macbeth. In addition, a
comparison will be made among the subversive aspect in Shakespeare and the rupture of
Euripides, representing both issues a parallel development on their plays, in the sense they
were pioneers of their age. This work finishes with a brief conclusion, accompanied by the
bibliography where all the sources and quotes are contrasted.
The importance of the essay resides on how Shakespeare can be so joined to Euripides’
plays in Macbeth if he did not know so much about the Greek tradition, because coincidences
are so obvious among their plays. That means Shakespeare could have studied Greek author
deeper than it is known nowadays. Mainly, the English bard could read some of the
Euripides’ plays, who broke with the general conventions of the Greek tradition. The same
Shakespeare did in the English renaissance.