Orestes and Other Plays

by Euripides

Other authorsPhilip Vellacott (Translator), Philip Vellacott (Introduction)
Paperback, 1983

Status

Available

Call number

882.01

Collection

Publication

Penguin Classics (1983), Paperback, 448 pages

Description

Written during the long battles with Sparta that were to ultimately destroy ancient Athens, these six plays by Euripides brilliantly utilize traditional legends to illustrate the futility of war. The Children of Heracles holds a mirror up to contemporary Athens, while Andromache considers the position of women in Greek wartime society. In The Suppliant Women, the difference between just and unjust battle is explored, while Phoenician Women describes the brutal rivalry of the sons of King Oedipus, and the compelling Orestes depicts guilt caused by vengeful murder. Finally, Iphigenia in Aulis, Euripides' last play, contemplates religious sacrifice and the insanity of war. Together, the plays offer a moral and political statement that is at once unique to the ancient world, and prophetically relevant to our own.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jwhenderson
Dramas from the era of the Peloponnesian wars between Sparta and Athens. Athenian playwright Euripides calls upon existing myths and legends to create plays that critically display the futility of war.
LibraryThing member Lukerik
If you're looking to read Euripides in English I recommend this edition, or any edition with Philip Vellacott's translations.
LibraryThing member yarb
These six plays chart Euripides' evolving despair at the war and those who continue to prosecute it year after year, decade after decade. I liked each one more than the one before it, with Orestes and Iphigenia in Aulis being just wild, savage, cruel masterpieces of indignant irony, black comedy
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and nihilistic beauty. I love the long, intricate antiphonal passages, the interspersed choral odes, the moments of total weirdness that 2,400+ years of cultural and textual dislocation tend to produce. I like Vellacott's roughly iambic translation, too, and his opinionated introductions to each of the plays.

Picked this up for 50 cents at the library booksale — that's less than 10 cents per play! Can't believe it's taken me this long to tap into Greek drama!
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Language

Original language

Greek (Ancient)

Original publication date

1972

Physical description

448 p.; 7.64 inches

ISBN

0140442596 / 9780140442595

Local notes

Children of Heracles, Andromache, Suppliant Women, Phoenician Women, Orestes, Iphigenia in Aulis
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