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28.1 Seneca's Tragedies in Nero's Rome 28.1 Seneca's Tragedies in Nero's Rome
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28.2 Seneca in Elizabethan England 28.2 Seneca in Elizabethan England
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28.3 The 1560s 28.3 The 1560s
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28.4 The 1580s and 1590s 28.4 The 1580s and 1590s
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Primary Works Primary Works
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28 English Seneca: Heywood to Hamlet
Get accessJessica Winston is an Associate Professor of English at Idaho State University. Her articles include ‘Seneca in Early Elizabethan England’ (Renaissance Quarterly, 2006) and ‘Expanding the Political Nation: Gorboduc at the Inns of Court and Succession Revisited’ (Early Theatre, 2005). She is currently working on a book on the literary community of the Inns of Court in the 1560s.
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Published:18 September 2012
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Abstract
Jasper Heywood helped develop interest in Seneca's works by making them accessible for a new generation of readers and writers. However, he was not wholly responsible for the ancient tragedian's growing popularity. How, then, can we explain the increasing interest in and importance of Senecan drama in the latter half of the sixteenth-century? This article addresses this question, making special reference to Thyestes, ‘the most influential of all the tragedies on Elizabethan theatre’. Several critics have noticed the political relevance of Seneca's works in Renaissance England, and this article is especially influenced by Gordon Braden's Renaissance Tragedy and the Senecan Tradition (1985), which explores the significance of Seneca's views on tyranny for Renaissance authors. Still, most studies, including Braden's, focus only on the later Elizabethan reception of the tragedies, and the article contributes to this topic by distinguishing between the early and later phases (the 1560s and the 1580s–1590s). Doing so allows it to address some of the similarities and differences in the character and political orientation of the translations and adaptations of Seneca in each one.
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