English Literature (Classic and Modern)
English Literature (Classic and Modern)
Representing the Furies
Throughout the Oresteia trilogy, the image of the Fury or Furies constantly appears as a means to represent the idea of revenge. Aeschylus takes this image in a new direction, however in the last play, the Eumenides, when he actually puts the Furies on stage as the chorus. How is the representation of the chorus of Furies—their words and actions—consistent with the earlier image of the Furies as the embodiment of revenge that has been presented in the preceding two plays? How does putting the Furies on stage add to or change this representation of the spirit of revenge?
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