Variation on a theme

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Variation on a theme is a fundamental aspect in art history.

"Graphic artists as well as musical composers sometimes work (or play) with variations on a theme."[1]

An example is William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors, in which key plot elements are taken from two Roman comedies of Plautus. From Menaechmi comes the main premise of mistaken identity between identical twins with the same name, plus some of the stock characters such as the comic courtesan. In Menaechmi one of the twins is from Epidamnus; Shakespeare changes this to Ephesus and includes many allusions to St Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians. From Amphitruo he borrows the twin servants with the same name, plus the scene in Act 3 where a husband is shut out of his house while his wife mistakenly dines with a look-alike. The frame story of Egeon and Emilia derives from Apollonius of Tyre, also a source for Twelfth Night and Pericles, Prince of Tyre.[2]


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  1. ^ Lewis-Williams and Dowson, 1988
  2. ^ Paul Skrebels, Sieta van der Hoeven For All Time?: Critical Issues in Teaching Shakespeare p.64

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