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Seneca Medeájának őrület-metaforái
Author(s) -
Katalin Bán
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
antikvitás and reneszánsz
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2677-0903
pISSN - 2560-2659
DOI - 10.14232/antikren.2019.4.27-36
Subject(s) - anger , soul , literature , drama , character (mathematics) , nak , poetry , art , philosophy , psychology , epistemology , computer science , social psychology , mathematics , geometry , telecommunications link , computer network
Seneca’s tragedies are characterized by widespread use of metaphors, emotions and personality traits of heroes and heroines often appear in imagery representations. In my study, I intend to examine the central anger metaphors and pictorial representations of Seneca’s Medea, that is, the metaphors of various manifestations of the sea storm, the fire and the snake which are represented and in many cases intertwined with each other in the character of the heroine. The Medea is a drama of the anger, the destructive forces in the soul, the revenge, which Seneca often expresses with the use of these pictorial representations and compares them to the destructive forces of nature. Their various aspects are complex and versatile in Seneca’s prose and poetry.

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