Published January 1, 2025 | Version v1

Interdicciones literarias del incesto: Séneca y la llegada del incesto edípico a Roma

Authors/Creators

Description

This article investigates how Greco‑Roman literature constructs a “literary jurisprudence” of incest, with particular focus on Oedipal incest. After reviewing the scant and conflicting treatment of incest by Greek philosophers and tragedians, it argues that Seneca, in his Oedipus, is the first Roman author to formulate an explicit interdiction of mother–son incest, presenting it as a miasma and as the gravest violation of the Naturae lex, in clear contrast both to Sophocles and to ancient positive jurisprudence, but, strikingly, this strong condemnation of incest is not found in Seneca’s philosophical works.

Files

2025-Criado-Séneca incesto.pdf

Files (378.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:f858bc6634273ed11b184639f46b01f2
378.5 kB Preview Download