logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Herakles - Euripides, Christian Wolff, Thomas Sleigh
Herakles
by: (author) (author) (author)
4.67 15
In Herakles, Euripides reveals with great subtlety and complexity the often brutal underpinnings of our social arrangements. The play enacts a thoroughly contemporary dilemma about the relationship between personal and state violence to civic order. Of all of Euripides' plays, this is his most... show more
In Herakles, Euripides reveals with great subtlety and complexity the often brutal underpinnings of our social arrangements. The play enacts a thoroughly contemporary dilemma about the relationship between personal and state violence to civic order. Of all of Euripides' plays, this is his most skeptically subversive examination of myth, morality, and power. Depicting Herakles slowly going mad by Hera, the wife of Zeus, this play continues to haunt and inspire readers. Hera hates Herakles because he is one of Zeus' children born of adultery, and in his madness, Herakles is driven to murder his own wife and children and is eventually exiled, by his own accord, to Athens. This new volume includes a fresh translation, an updated introduction, detailed notes on the text, and a thorough glossary.
show less
Format: paperback
ISBN: 9780195131161 (0195131169)
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Pages no: 128
Edition language: English
Bookstores:
Community Reviews
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd rated it
4.0 Euripides teaches us about war
In August 2010 Matthew Magdzas, a national guard veteran of one tour of duty in Iraq, returned home, and without warning, murdered his pregnant wife and his daughter before turning the gun on himself. Later, in England, David Bradley, a long serving member of the British Armed forces who had served ...
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd rated it
4.5 A story of redemption
Like pretty much all of the Greek tragedies this play utilises the unities of time and place. The entire action takes place in a single day outside a palace in Thebes. Once again, all of the action takes place off stage and in narrated to the audience by one of the characters, and as in other plays ...
Other editions (17)
Books by Euripides
Books by Christian Wolff
Books by Thomas Sleigh
On shelves
Share this Book
Need help?