Iocaste

Greek mythology
Also known as: Epicaste, Jocasta

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Assorted References

  • interpretation by Graham
    • Martha Graham
      In Martha Graham: Maturity of Martha Graham

      …about the Greek legendary figure Jocasta, the whole dance-drama takes place in the instant when Jocasta learns that she has mated with Oedipus, her own son, and has borne him children. The work treats Jocasta rather than Oedipus as the tragic victim, and shows her reliving the events of her…

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role in legend of

    • Antigone
      • In Antigone

        …of Oedipus and his mother, Jocasta. After her father blinded himself upon discovering that Jocasta was his mother and that, also unwittingly, he had slain his father, Antigone and her sister Ismene served as Oedipus’ guides, following him from Thebes into exile until his death near Athens. Returning to Thebes,…

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    • Oedipus
      • Attic cup: Oedipus and the Sphinx
        In Oedipus

        …when his wife, Jocasta (Iocaste; in Homer, Epicaste), bore a son, he had the baby exposed (a form of infanticide) on Cithaeron. (Tradition has it that his name, which means “Swollen-Foot,” was a result of his feet having been pinned together, but modern scholars are skeptical of that etymology.)…

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