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- Subject: English/Greek Literature -
- Sophocles's Electra vs. Euripides's Electra
-
- Euripides and Sophocles wrote their own versions of the Electra story.
- The basic plot is as follows: Agamemnon is killed by Clytemnestra and
- her lover Aegisthus after he returns from the Trojan war to reclaim his
- sister-in-law Helen from the Trojans. Electra and her brother Orestes
- plot to kill their mother and her lover to revenge his death. Both
- authors wrote about the same plot, but the built the story very
- differently. Sophocles focused on Orestes, and Euripides focused more
- on the life of Electra.
- In Sophocles's version, the play opens with Orestes learning his fate
- from the Pythian Oracle; he must revenge his father's death unarmed and
- alone. He sends his pedagogue Pylades, as a spy, to learn about the
- situation in Mycenae. Electra mourns for her father's death. She is
- unable to avenge her father's murders without the help of Orestes, her
- brother. She is also mad about how her mother and her lover waste her
- father's riches and desecrate his name. Her half-sister Chrysothemis is
- no help to Electra and refuses to help in the murder of her mother and
- mother's lover. Pylades arrives bearing the sad news of Orestes death.
- He tells Clytemnestra that Orestes was killed in a chariot race at the
- Delphian games; his body was cremated and his ashes were sent to
- Mycenae. Concealing his identity, Orestes arrives and with the help of
- Electra and Pylades, plots the murder of his mother and his mother's
- lover. Orestes enter the palace, kills his mother and returns to
- Electra. When Aegisthus arrives, Orestes kills him as well fulfilling
- his destiny.
- Euripides's version is much more dramatic. The play begins with
- Electra's marriage to a peasant. Aegisthus had tried to kill Electra
- but Clytemnestra convinced him to allow her to live. He decided to
- marry her to a peasant so her children will be humbly born and pose no
- threat to his throne. Orestes and Pylades arrive. Orestes says that he
- has come to Apollo's shrine to pledge himself to avenge his father's
- murder. Orestes, concealing his identity, talks with Electra about the
- recent happenings in Mycenae. She admits that she is sad that her
- brother had been taken away at such a young age and the only person that
- would recognize him would be her father's old servant. She also
- discusses her scorn of Aegisthus desecrating the monument over
- Agamemnon's grave and his ridicule of Orestes. When the old servant
- arrives, after being summoned by Electra, he recognizes and identifies
- Orestes to Electra. Only after seeing the scar over his eye, is Electra
- convinced that it is him. They then begin to plot Aegisthus and
- Clytemnestra's murder. Orestes follows Aegisthus into the stables
- during his sacrifice and kills him with his own knife. They then kill
- Clytemnestra when she comes to them after hearing that Electra had a
- baby. After the killing, miraculously, Castor and Polydeuces appear
- above the house blaming Apollo for instigating the butchery. They then
- list all the events necessary for Electra and Orestes to be redeemed.
- Both these versions have the same basic plot but go about telling the
- story differently. Euripides is much more dramatic. He makes Electra
- more involved and discusses the consequences of their act. Sophocles
- only tells the story of what happened up until the killing. He focuses
- more on Orestes's role. My favorite was Sophocles's because to me, he
- is a much better writer and puts in better details, but both of these
- plays were terrific.
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