Dramatic Irony – Dramatic irony is one the most crucial elements in an ancient Greek tragedy. It is a format used in many of Aeschylus‚ Euripides‚ and Sophocles plays. Usually the tragedy will begin with a monologue from a character or the chorus telling the audience what will happen. When the events unfold to be true a sense of irony unveils. An awesome example of irony is in Aeschylus’ Agamemnon. Cassandra has prophetic powers; however‚ the Chorus does not listen to and understand anything she
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In Aeschylus’s Eumenides‚ the trial of Orestes leads to a profound interaction between the Erinyes‚ soon to be the Eumenides‚ and the goddess Athena. The Erinyes are forced to abandon their “ancient rights”‚ with their reward being a cave underneath the city and the power to bless those who honor them. There is a distinct tension created between Athena and the Erinyes‚ as it is clear that Athena is taking their customs by force rather than the Erinyes choosing to give up what they hold dear. Refrain
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Kiersten Baxley Professor Shirokova English 1102 12 September 2012 Anne Carson’s Lessons Anne Carson is a very intelligent and well rounded writer. When I first read Anne Carson’s “Short Talks”‚ I was seriously confused. At first‚ I thought she was an abstract writer that wrote just to write. But then I took a second look at her work and realized there was much more to it than just crazy jumbled ideas. “Short Talks” is a mixture of many elements. It has argumentation‚ facts‚ personal opinions
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Hafiz Muhammd Asad Prof. Dr Asim Kareem 10 February 2013 Is Clytemnestra Blameworthy or Innocent? When a person is accused of a crime they are either found innocent or guilty. This is the basic idea of justice and it is what many feel needs to happen if someone has done something controversial. In the play Oresteia by Aeschylus‚ the story of Clytemnestra’s guilt or innocence is questioned. She does many things that people are not too happy with and those controversial
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of heroes as symbols of territorial rights can be seen as a reason for inter-polis rivalry (Athens‚ Sparta‚ etc.). The transfer of bones from different city-states can be seen as evidence of this assumption. For example‚ the transfer of bones of Orestes from Tegea to Sparta can be seen as Sparta’s efforts to dominate Tegea‚ suggesting that the hero-cult possessed power even after the establishment of the Greek polis (McCauley). The transfer of bones of Theseus from Scyros to Athens can also be looked
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Is Facebook “Good” For You? Ellie B April 10‚ 2012 Think back to 2005‚ just a mere seven years ago. MySpace was climbing the charts with 26.7 million users (MacManus‚ 2006). YouTube was just launched and gained much popularity through MySpace. Mark Zuckerburg had just created Facebook the year before and has just opened usage to high school students (Acohido‚ 2009). Nobody living in 2005 could have ever predicted the skyrocketing usage of the internet in the years to come
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Sarah Brownson HIST 195 Immigrant Book Critique “Where do we go from here?” This is the question that resounded through most peoples’ heads as they walked through the Golden Gates of Ellis Island into America for the first time. Ellis Island Interviews by Peter Morton Coan does a great job describing the history of Ellis Island and the personal encounters of a fraction of immigrants who passed through in their journey to start a new life. Ellis Island was active from January 1‚ 1892
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Aeschylus- Agamemnon Characters- The Watchman Clytaemnestra The Herald Agamemnon Cassandra Aegisthus The Chorus 1). The Watchman: The watchman sets the time and place for the play (Agamemnon’s palace in Argos‚ the house of Atreus); he describes the many miserable nights he has spent on the rooftop of the palace watching for the signal fires that will herald the
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Aryan race. * Amico Rodolfo-He is insensitive and caught up in Italian high society‚ and he makes Dora unhappy. * Bartolomeo-One of Guido’s bunkmates in the concentration camp. * Vittorino-A fellow prisoner at the concentration camp. * Oreste-the man who employs Ferruccio as an upholsterer. II. Summary Guido‚ and Ferruccio‚ rocket down a country slope‚ the brakes on their old car having given way. They pass through a parade‚ and the audience is immediately aware of where
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How do Homer’s the Iliad and Odyssey compare and contrast? July 4‚ 2012 at 8:12 am How do Homer’s the Iliad and Odyssey compare and contrast? The Iliad begins with Chryses‚ a prophet of Apollo‚ coming to a Greek camp and offering valuable “penalty tokens” requesting the return of his daughter who the Greeks had captured in a raid. Because Agamemnon believed she was rightfully his‚ he refused. Most of his fellow Greeks wanted him to return her in order to avoid conflict. In order to preserve
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