Sophocles

The Electra or Elektra

Cover
Gefällt mir
Später
Fertig
Notizen
Sammlung
Teilen
Das erwartet Dich
Electra, Elektra, or The Electra by Sophocles is a Greek tragedy by Sophocles. Its date is not known, but various stylistic similarities with the Philoctetes (409 BC) and the Oedipus at Colonus (401 BC) lead scholars to suppose that it was written towards the end of Sophocles' career. Jebb dates it between 420 BC and 414 BC. Storyline: Orestes arrives with his friend Pylades, son of Strophius, and a pedagogue, i.e. tutor (an old attendant of Orestes, who took him from Electra to Strophius). Their plan is to have the tutor announce that Orestes has died in a chariot race, and that two men (really Orestes and Pylades) are arriving shortly to deliver an urn with his remains. Meanwhile, Electra continues to mourn the death of her father Agamemnon, holding her mother Clytemnestra responsible for his murder. When Electra is told of the death of Orestes her grief is doubled, but is to be short-lived. After a choral ode, Orestes arrives carrying the urn supposedly containing his ashes. He does not recognize Electra, nor she him. He gives her the urn and she delivers a moving lament over it, unaware that her brother is in fact standing alive next to her. Now realizing the truth, Orestes reveals his identity to his emotional sister. She is overjoyed that he is alive, but in their excitement they nearly reveal his identity, and the tutor comes out from the palace to urge them on. Orestes and Pylades enter the house and slay Clytemnestra. As Aegisthus returns home, they quickly put her corpse under a sheet and present it to him as the body of Orestes. He lifts the veil to discover who it really is, and Orestes then reveals himself. They escort Aegisthus off set to be killed at the hearth, the same location Agamemnon was slain. The play ends here, before the death of Aegisthus is announced.
Mehr
Weniger
Veröffentlichungsdatum
05.05.2023
Serie
-
Erlebe die ganze Geschichte

Fassung
Unabridged
Laufzeit
1 Stunde 24 Minuten
Explizit
Nein

Fassung
Unabridged
Laufzeit
1 Stunde 24 Minuten
Explizit
Nein
Die verstehen ihr Handwerk
Verlag anzeigen
Beifall für dieses Ensemble
Reviews von unseren Experten
Review verfassen

Noch keine Reviews

Fangen Sie an, indem Sie Ihre eigene Bewertung schreiben.