Electra Euripides Screenplay Overview Electra was born in 415 BC and began the farmer's story about the past. Sam of Agamemnon, Orestes grew up escaping in Phocis. Daughter Electra is forced to marry farmers at the time of marriage rather than aristocrat, so domination of Egistos may be threatened. Marriage has not been completed. "If someone thinks me to be stupid, young girls in the house / my family will never touch her / he will use the wrong thing in my opinion to measure the right thing "(107).
Sophocles and Euclid version of Euripides and Electra version of Euripides are the central theme of revenge in many similarities. Characters, Electra and Orestes have to see again in retaliation against the father's murder. Unfortunately, in both versions, a legitimate solution led the brothers and sisters to destroy their mothers. Both versions of Electra can be compared with Aeschylus' Libation Bearers. But compared to Electra and Esiros' respective plays, they are more dramatic and more similar.
In "Clouds and Electra," Aristophanes and Euripides are distinguishing the mature evolution of Streptsia de Orestes and Electra from the existing misfortune and the reaction of their respective roles to their educational method. Although suffering and maturation are intertwined, each character is educated through pain. Strepsiades repeatedly borrowed his debts, Orestes received his education by killing his father parent's murderer, and Electra received her education through continuous suffering It was.
Introduction: - Thanks to the tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides, Electra and Orestes achieved such great success and received great praise for their expression, themes, symbols and plots. Incest love, demolition, betrayal, and especially mourning had wide contact and debate. For example, revenge is the soul of these two plays, and it is mainly discussed as a theme of drama. But the relationship with the tragedy of character is far better than argument.
Electra Electra is a tragedy that encourages readers to consider the nature of human reactions to injustice. Seek fairness and injustice, correct unfair behavior, and mark vulnerable boundaries between moral and moral errors. Aristophanes' "clouds" are disguised tragedies as a comedy that shines the deep ignorance of Strepsiades against justice, behavior and civilization. There is a dark conclusion behind Aristophanes' comedy approach, suggesting the problem faced by today's civilization: ignorance and resistance to its evolution.