Phaedra: Analysis of Setting
"Phaedra: Analysis of Setting" delves into the geographical and cultural contexts that shape the narrative of Phaedra, a character intertwined with themes of desire and identity. Central to the analysis is Troezen, a serene town in the Peloponnesus, renowned as the birthplace of Theseus and childhood home of Hippolytus. This setting contrasts sharply with the bustling life of Athens, which serves as Both the political heart and a place fraught with darker themes, such as the tribute to the Minotaur that once plagued its citizens.
Crete is introduced as a significant mythological locale, home to the Minotaur and linked to Phaedra’s origins, which add layers of complexity to her character and her motivations. The mention of Scythia highlights the perceptions of otherness, as Hippolytus, born of an Amazonian mother, exists on the fringes of Athenian society. The analysis also touches upon Naxos, a pivotal location in the narrative, where Theseus’s abandonment of Ariadne sets the stage for Phaedra’s tumultuous story. By exploring these settings, the analysis reveals how geographical elements are intrinsically tied to the characters' fates and the unfolding of their desires.
Phaedra: Analysis of Setting
First published: 1677 (English translation, 1701)
First produced:Phèdre, 1677
Type of work: Drama
Type of plot: Tragedy
Time of work: Antiquity
Asterisk denotes entries on real places.
Places Discussed
*Troezen
*Troezen (TREE-zun). Greek town in the Peloponnesus, on the Saronic Gulf, opposite Athens, that is the birthplace of Theseus, king of Athens, as well as his son Hippolytus’s childhood home. Troezen is a “gentle province” removed from “the blaze of Athens’s brawling protocol.” However, Hippolytus’s return to Troezen to live under the same roof as Phaedra during Theseus’s absence makes the province seethe with forbidden desires.
*Athens
*Athens. Theseus’s seat of government. Before Theseus’s reign, Athens’s subordination to Crete required an annual tribute of fourteen young people to be devoured by the Cretan Minotaur.
*Crete
*Crete (kreet). Fifth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, located southeast of the Greek mainland. There, in a mazelike labyrinth at Knossos, lives the Minotaur, the creature born from Queen Pasiphaë’s coupling with a white bull that the sea god Poseidon gave to her husband, King Minos. Theseus killed the Minotaur with the help of Princess Ariadne, then married her sister Phaedra. Phaedra’s Cretan origins establish not only her foreignness in Athens—in contrast to Princess Aricia’s pure Athenian blood—but also her heritage of monstrous passion, embodied at play’s end in the bull-dragon from the sea that kills Hippolytus.
*Scythia
*Scythia (SIHTH-ee-ah). Area in southeastern Europe, around the region northeast of the Black Sea in what is now Moldava, Ukraine, and western Russia. The Greeks considered the Scythians and their Amazon neighbors, a female warrior society, barbarians. Hippolytus, as the son of Antiope, an Amazon whom Theseus carried off to Athens, is both an illegitimate heir and a despised alien.
*Naxos
*Naxos. Largest and most fertile of Greece’s Cyclades Islands, almost at the center of the Aegean Sea. There, Theseus abandons Ariadne before kidnapping Antiope and marrying Phaedra.
Bibliography
Abraham, Claude. “Phèdre.” In Jean Racine. Boston: Twayne, 1977. This chapter in Abraham’s book focuses on Racine’s radical alterations of the characterizations from his sources, Euripides and Seneca. He also emphasizes the musicality of Racine’s language and his emphasis on the importance of eyes.
Clark, A. F. B. “Phèdre.” In Jean Racine. New York: Octagon Books, 1969. An overview of Racine’s work that includes chapters on the age of Racine, classical tragedy before Racine, Racine’s life, and each of his plays. Clark demonstrates that Phaedra marks Racine’s transition from secular to sacred plays as the protagonist is a “Greek woman with a Jansenist conscience,” full of the consciousness of her sin.
Mourgues, Odette de. Racine: Or, The Triumph of Relevance. London: Cambridge University Press, 1967. This study focuses on the patterns created by the interdependence and function of Racine’s tragic components. Mourgues praises Racine’s poetic depth and asserts that, in his tragedies, language reigns supreme.
Weinberg, Bernard. “Phèdre.” In The Art of Jean Racine. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1963. Weinberg’s book contains one chapter for each of Racine’s plays. He declares Phaedra to be the author’s most completely achieved drama because of its originality, unity, and characterization.
Yarrow, Philip John. “From Mithridate to Phèdre.” In Racine. Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1978. In this chapter of his exhaustive study of Racine’s oeuvre, Yarrow examines Racine’s motivations for writing Phaedra, explores Racine’s debt to Euripides and Seneca, and proclaims that the play is the culmination of Racine’s work.