Three tragedies by renaissance women
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Three tragedies by renaissance women
(Renaissance dramatists)
Ppenguin ; 1998
- : pbk
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Contents of Works
- The tragedies of Iphigenedia / in a version by Jane, Lady Lumley
- The tragedies of Antonie / translated by Mary, countees of Pembroke
- The tragedies of Mariam / by Erizabeth Cary
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume contains unmodernized versions of plays by each of the three leading Renaissance women dramatists: Elizabeth Cary's "The Tragedie of Mariam" (1613), the story of the plight of a woman married against her will to an unbending tyrant; June Lumley's version of Euripides' "Iphigenia" (1550), the earliest surviving translation of a Greek tragedy; and Mary Sidney's "Antonie" (1590), a blank verse translation of a French Senecan play. Intended for private production, all three were able to address contentious political issues - the nature of the good ruler, resistance to unjust authority - which were seldom permitted on the public stage.
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