Seneca: Thyestes

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, Dec 19, 2003 - Literary Collections - 160 pages

Written in Nero's Rome in about AD62, Seneca's "Thyestes" is one of the ggreatest and most influential of classical tragedies. As the bloodiest work in the Greco-Roman canon, "Thyestes" was long reviled for its depiction of savage violence and for its representation of human bestiality. Peter Davis argues that the play needs to be understood as the response of a major politician, philosopher and tragic poet to the increasingly tyrannical rule of the emperor. In this companion he explores key aspects of the play, including the circumstances of its composition, its performance history and its impact on subsequent dramatists, including Shakespeare and Jonson.

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Contents

Acknowledgements
7
Performance History
19
Themes and Issues
37
Copyright

4 other sections not shown

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About the author (2003)

P.J. Davis is Associate Professor and Head of Classics in the School of History and Classics at the University of Tasmania. He has published on a variety of Latin authors, including Calpurnius Siculus, Horace, Ovid, Seneca, Statius and Virgil, and is the author of Shifting Song: the Chorus in Seneca's Tragedies (1993).

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