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Electra
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In the Aeschylean version of the material with which Sophocles is
dealing in his Electra, there appear a few
important characteristics the awareness of which lends perspective to the
Sophoclean tragedy.
For the purpose of this study, we only need to concern ourselves with
the second part of the Aechylean trilogy, the
Oresteia, namely the
Choephoroe. The first part deals with the
antecedents of the events. Agamemnon, the commander of the Greek forces, who
sacrificed his daughter, Iphigenia, in order to appease the goddess Artemis
and to regain divine favor for the storm-bound fleet at Aulis, returns,
after Troy's destruction, victoriously to his land of Argos where
Clytemnestra, his wife, has been nurturing her hatred of him because of his
consent to Iphigenia's death. She has joined forces with Aegisthus, who, for
savage cruelties committed against his family, is also burning with a desire
for revenge on Agamemnon. Aegisthus not only becomes Clytemnestra's ally,
but dishonors Agamemnon at the same time.
Title: Electra
Description:
In the Aeschylean version of the material with which Sophocles is
dealing in his Electra, there appear a few
important characteristics the awareness of which lends perspective to the
Sophoclean tragedy.
For the purpose of this study, we only need to concern ourselves with
the second part of the Aechylean trilogy, the
Oresteia, namely the
Choephoroe.
The first part deals with the
antecedents of the events.
Agamemnon, the commander of the Greek forces, who
sacrificed his daughter, Iphigenia, in order to appease the goddess Artemis
and to regain divine favor for the storm-bound fleet at Aulis, returns,
after Troy's destruction, victoriously to his land of Argos where
Clytemnestra, his wife, has been nurturing her hatred of him because of his
consent to Iphigenia's death.
She has joined forces with Aegisthus, who, for
savage cruelties committed against his family, is also burning with a desire
for revenge on Agamemnon.
Aegisthus not only becomes Clytemnestra's ally,
but dishonors Agamemnon at the same time.
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