Product details:

ISBN13:9781800856288
ISBN10:1800856288
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages: pages
Size:210x147 mm
Weight:666 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 3 Illustrations, black & white
700
Category:

Aeschylus: Agamemnon

 
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Date of Publication:
 
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Publisher's listprice:
GBP 95.00
Estimated price in HUF:
45 885 HUF (43 700 HUF + 5% VAT)
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Long description:

The first revenge drama, the first great female role, the first tragedy set on the cusp between public space and private household, the first part of the only surviving tragic trilogy?the foundational status of Aeschylus? monumental Agamemnon cannot be over-estimated. Agamemnon?s entry on a chariot, arrogant passage over purple carpets, death in the bath and display as a corpse, along with the inspired prophetess, his war booty Cassandra, make this tragedy visually electrifying; the poetry, especially in Clytemnestra?s orations and the choral odes, in magniloquence and vivid imagery surpasses anything in classical literature. This new edition, with Greek text, critical introduction, accessible translation and detailed commentary gives consistent support in construing the ancient Greek and appreciating the aural power of Aeschylus? language and rhythms. It draws on cutting-edge scholarship to provide unprecedented illumination of sociological and performative aspects of his play: the chorus? struggle to maintain representation for ordinary Argives, the different responses of Clytemnestra and Cassandra to the inequities imposed on them by patriarchy, the sensory experience of poetry imbued with prompts to taste, smell, touch and hearing as well as vision, the challenges and opportunities presented by the text to directors and actors both ancient and modern, and the thrilling control of the tragic medium by its undisputed founding father.

Table of Contents:

Introduction

1 A Play about Pain
2 Political and Historical Context
3 The Argive Constitution in Agamemnon
4 Plot, Temporality and Structure
5 Characters
5.i The Watchman
5.ii The Chorus
5.iii Clytemnestra
5.iv The Herald
5.v Agamemnon
5.vi Cassandra
5.vii Aegisthus
6 Religion
6.i Gods
6.ii Ritual Performed and Evoked
6.iii The Erinyes and the Family Curse
7 Sensory Theatre
8 Imagery and Spectacle
8.i Verbalisation to Visualisation
8.ii Legal Language
8.iii Mammalian Reproduction
8.iv More Fauna
8.v The House
9 Soundscapes, Voices, Vocality
10 Style and Language
11 Sources and Antecedents
12 The Afterlife and Influence of Agamemnon in Antiquity
13 Reception from the Renaissance to the 21st Century
14 Texts and Commentaries
15 Conclusion

Greek Text and English Translation

Commentary

Metrical Appendix

Abbreviations and Bibliography

Index