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The IUP Journal of English Studies :
Death as the ‘Datum’ in Alcestis and Svapnavasavadattam: A Comparative Analysis
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Euripides (485 BC-406 BC) was the youngest of the great triad of Greek tragic poets. It is said that Euripides wrote the play, Alcestis as the fourth play in a tetralogy and Alfred Schone considers it “a parody, and finds it very funny.” But according to Gilbert Norwood, the play dealing “poignantly with the most solemn interests of humanity” and “imitating actual life more closely, belongs to the sphere of tragedy” though “presenting comic features.” Bhasa, who must have lived in the second half of the 4th century BC, is often referred to as the “Father of the Indian drama.” He is an accomplished Sanskrit poet of a very high order. He is known for his dramatic style and his plays are marked by profound psychological insight, striking figures of speech, brilliant epigrams and have all the navarasas—humor, heroism, surprise, anger, pity, terror, serenity, devotion and love. He wrote the play, Svapnavasavadattam, by borrowing a theme from Gunadhya’s Brihatkatha. In both these plays that poignantly deal with the most solemn interests of humanity, the plot revolves around ‘death’—real or faked. This paper attempts to analyze and comparatively evaluate the grace with which the playwrights handle the conflict with death and the challenges—unequal relationship of man to woman, death versus character, sacrifice versus self-interest and object versus subject, etc.,—emerging therefore.

 
 
 

Among the three greatest tragic playwrights of Greece, Euripides is the latest in point of time and importantly, “is the most modern in tone and sentiment.”1 It is “his truthful and accurate imitation of nature” that differentiates him from his predecessors most. He, besides being cosmopolitan in his outlook, painted his characters “as they are.”2 Critics opine that he has depicted the “mean, paltry, and contemptible side of human nature as carefully and accurately as the majestic and imposing.” Unlike Aeschylus and Sophocles, his characters, shunning the ideal grandeur, breathe “a more homely and domestic tone.” Yet another characteristic feature that distinguishes him from his seniors is “his tenderness and sentimentality” that places him as a forerunner of romantic school of dramatists. It is his intense appreciation for “the more affectionate feelings of human nature” that gave us some of the finest female characters in his plays that are as lovable to even modern readers as Desdemonas and Ophelias of Shakespeare. And probably, it is this understanding of woman, paradoxically, that gave him the reputation of being a misogynist. It is his innovative spirit that made him the founder of love dramas but also enabled him to turn out a tragic-comedy like Alcestis, in which, the pathetic and the humorous are deliberately interspersed. Being a prolific writer, Euripides authored about 88 or more plays, of which 19 have survived. George Bernard Shaw considered him as the greatest of the Greek dramatists, while many others regarded him as the pioneer of the ‘modern’ European drama.

 
 
 

English Studies Journal, Death, ‘Datum’, Alcestis, Svapnavasavadattam, heroism, surprise, anger, pity, terror, serenity, devotion, love, Comparative Analysis.