In 2004 the visual artist Joan Jonas staged a video/installation/mixed media project of Helen in Egypt at the Tate Gallery. Almost sixty years since its composition, Jonas recasts H.D.’s long, neo-epic poem extending and exposing the possibilities of dramatic space and its dialogical connections with media that reinforce, undermine and raise questions about the interplay between dramatic space, poetry and narrativity. In her rendering of the Euripidean Helen, H.D. explores the ability of spatial transformation. She conceives Egypt as a locus of “spaceless limbo” or, to use Michel Foucault’s term, “Heterotopia,” a site “that can be found within the culture, simultaneously represented, contested, and inverted.” Within the timeline of the Trojan cycle, H.D. provides a spatial reading of a civilization transfixed by war. In the heterotopic space of the Tate, Jonas in turn, interweaves through her video installation performance Lines in the Sand the originary mythic text with H.D.’s neo-epic and references to H.D’s Tribute to Freud. Both women artists creatively exploit the ever-transformative dynamics of the myth to make a case about its impact on Western literary tradition.