Hero and Leander, Christopher Marlowe - Erich Segal (essay date fall 1963)
Erich Segal (essay date fall 1963)
SOURCE: Segal, Erich. “Hero and Leander: Góngora and Marlowe.” Comparative Literature 15, no. 4 (fall 1963): 338-56.
[In the following essay, Segal contrasts Marlowe's and Luis de Góngora y Argote's versions of the Hero and Leander story.]
That contemporaries like Góngora and Marlowe should have chosen the same classical myth is hardly a remarkable literary phenomenon.1 What is interesting about their versions of the Hero and Leander story is that, while their approaches are similar, they stand diametrically opposed to all previous treatments of the legend. Both poets have made mock heroic a tale hitherto treated only with high seriousness, casting an unsentimental eye on what was traditionally the tenderest of love stories. In their cynical interpretations, Marlowe and Góngora employ similar images, make similar mythological allusions, and describe their protagonists in similar...
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- Paul D. Miller (essay date April 1953)
- Martin T. Williams (essay date September 1955)
- Russell A. Fraser (essay date October 1958)
- Eugene B. Cantelupe (essay date January 1963)
- Erich Segal (essay date fall 1963)
- Brian Morris (essay date 1968)
- S. Ann Collins (essay date fall 1970)
- Louis L. Martz (essay date 1972)
- Elizabeth Bieman (essay date winter 1979)
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- M. Morgan Holmes (essay date June 1995)
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- John Leonard (essay date winter 2000)
- Claude Summers (essay date 2000)
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