MENANDER: Plays & Fragments. THEOPHRASTUS: The Characters

by Philip Vellacott (Translator)

Other authorsMenander (Author), Theophrastus (Author)
Paperback, 1967

Status

Available

Call number

882.01

Collection

Publication

Penguin Books (1967), Mass Market Paperback, 246 pages

User reviews

LibraryThing member Lukerik
Characters. Much better than I thought it would be. Very funny. I had to take my specs off so I could wipe my eyes. Thirty satirical sketches of undesirable personality types, all delivered though gritted teeth in a tone of disbelief. Reminded me of the sort of role John Cleese might play. Some of
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the things Theophrastus describes are so specific I’m sure many of these characters would have been recognised by their fellow Athenians at the time. Also very interesting for the details of daily life that you just don’t get in more formal literary works.

The pairing with Menander is nice as you have teacher and pupil in the same volume. I’ve not read this translation as I read a different one some time go. Vellacott’s translations of Euripides are superb. Menander is worth reading if you’re interested in the history of the theatre.

Both authors have been given the Penguin Classics treatment usual at the time and smoothed out of popular consumption. Characters translates just the Ancient Greek text, but not the Byzantine interpolations that appear in the manuscripts. According to the introduction, Dyskolos was done for a radio production and some liberties have been taken with the allocation of lines. The 2nd edition (1973) has more Menander than had been discovered when the first edition came out.
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Language

Original language

Greek (Ancient)

ISBN

none
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