George Chapman's "Oedipus Complex": Intertextual Patterns in The Conspiracy and The Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron
Abstract
Gunilla Florby’s essay situates George Chapman’s two-part play The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron at the intersection between topical reference and classical intertext. In particular, Florby investigates the transformation of Seneca’s Oedipus into an eloquent debate with a bearing on current political events such as the Essex conspiracy. By exploring the double take in this double play, Florby is able to sound the text’s “dynamic interaction of positions and ideologies”—something which lies at the heart of Chapman’s obsessive exploration of the classical heritage that informed his writing.
Publisher
Uni-pub, Norway (hard copy)
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2005-12Author
Florby, Gunilla
Keywords
early modern literature, George Chapman, Duke of Byron, subversion, illicit sexuality, Seneca, intertext, topicality
ISSN
1502-7694