Kniha Euripides: Electra Kovacs

Euripides: Electra

Edited with Introduction and Commentary

Jazyk: Angličtina
Vazba: Pevná
Dostupnost: Skladem u dodavatele
Odesíláme za 14-21 dnů
4 543
This volume presents a newly edited text of Euripides'' Electra with a scene-by-scene and line-by-li...

Informace o knize

Jazyk
Angličtina
Vazba
Kniha - Pevná
Vydáno
2026
Stránek
288
EAN
9780192867131
Enbook ID
48986066
Hmotnost
497
Rozměry
138 x 216

Kompletní popis

This volume presents a newly edited text of Euripides'' Electra with a scene-by-scene and line-by-line commentary that addresses a wide variety of questions, including the nature of Euripidean tragedy. In his Introduction and across several discussions in the commentary, David Kovacs presents an alternative to the current scholarly consensus on Euripides. Scholars following this consensus tell us that Euripides'' play is a cynical take on the old story of Orestes'' and Electra''s revenge on Aegisthus and Clytaemestra. Both of the principal figures, we are told, are morally diminished, Electra inter alia by her excessive hatred of Clytaemestra and Orestes by his cynical reliance on Aegisthus'' hospitable nature to get himself invited to the sacrifice at which he will kill his host. It is also alleged that this play virtually excludes the gods, who are part and parcel of the tragic genre. Kovacs shows that these and similar unfavourable judgements fail to take note of the practice of the other tragedians and also overlook evidence from Euripides'' text, such as the frequent mention of the gods, that locate the play squarely within the tragic genre. What emerges is a play that is well constructed and thematically integrated; a play whose novelties--and an Athenian audience would not have wanted a play on an oft-treated myth to lack novelty--are all new ways of producing tragic effects found also in Aeschylus and Sophocles; a play that gives greater scope to the tragic view of the universe than even the corresponding plays of Aeschylus and Sophocles, thereby confirming Aristotle''s judgement that Euripides is ''the most tragic of the poets''; in short, a play that can be called a tragedy without qualification. The gap between Euripides'' original manuscript and the earliest complete copy we possess is nearly two millennia. This volume makes a considerable number of suggestions for improving a Greek text that has been badly corrupted over this period of manual copying.

Mohlo by vás zajímat

On This Bright Day

Susan Peirce Thompson Ph.D.
419

Elite Performance Skills

Life Is a Special Operation Com
290
331

Peru

Alicia Z. Klepeis
348

Beau Geste

Percival Christopher Wren
766

Sempe

Jean-Jacques Sempe
361
444
393
307

Every One Still Here

CHUINN LIADAN NI
299

Eurasian Encounters

Yoshiyuki Kikuchi
1 438

God is in my Tummy

Diane Marie Howell
687

Zákaznicí kteří koupili tuto knihu koupili také

Cal

Bernard MacLaverty
308

V Lesu Na Beregakh Shishima

Gradar' Ieromonakh Evgeniy
708
1 219
514

TRIGGER

DANIEL WEISSBERG
737
878

La Reina Margarita...

Alexandre Dumas
559