Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:2120Hits:961689Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Introduction
Information
Ask Us
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Book   Book
 

ID017004
Call Number882.01/EUR
Title ProperMedea and other plays
Other Title InformationMedea.Hecabe.Electra.Herales
LanguageENG
AuthorEuripides ;  Vellacott, Philip(Tr.)
PublicationLondon,  Penguin Books,  1963.
Description199p   Black spine
SeriesPenguin classics
NotePhilip Vellacott has provided excellent translations and commentaries on four of the plays of Euripides, including his classic "Medea." "Medea" is a study in how unbridled passion can overcome reason and lead to tragedy. This may be particularly pertinent with respect to the ongoing war between Athens and Sparta at the time the play was first presented. Medea, who had helped Jason in his quest, become his wife, and given him two sons, feels betrayed since he is marrying the daughter of the ruler of Corinth. With horrible vengence, she kills the bride and the king and then her two sons. "Hecabe" is a play about the wife of Priam, King of Troy, and the mother of Hector, Paris, Cassandra, and others. At the start of this play, the war between the Greeks and Troy is over and Hecabe is now a slave of Agamemnon. The ghost of Achilles had appeared and demanded a sacrifice over his tomb before the Greeks can set sail for home. They vote to sacrifice Polyxena, Hecabe's young daughter, despite the tears and entreaties of Hecabe. After Polyxena's noble death, Hecabe learns that her last child Polydorus had been murdered by the King of Thrace, Polymestor, to whom Polydorus had been sent for safekeeping. This finally drives Hecabe mad and she seeks vengence for Polydorus's death. Euripedes shows in this play the effects of war and vengence on innocent lives and how cruel men at war can be. "Electra" is another retelling of the vengence story of Electra and Orestes. In this version, they are less heroic and more realistic then the way they are portrayed by Aeschylus and Sophocles
NoteMedea
Hecabe
Electra
Heracles
Standard Number9780140441291
Price. Qualification£7.99(Pb)
Classification Number882.01
Key WordsIBDP ;  Greek drama ;  Theatre arts ;  Mythology, Greek - Drama ;  Greek drama (Tragedy)


 
 
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
I01018882.01/EURMainOn ShelfGeneral 
I01977882.01/EURMainOn ShelfGeneral