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Aeschylus Persae

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ISBN-10: 0199269890

ISBN-13: 9780199269891

Edition: 2009

Authors: Aeschylus, A. F. Garvie

List price: $187.50
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Aeschylus' Persae, first produced in 472 BC, is the oldest surviving Greek tragedy. It is also the only extant Greek tragedy that deals, not with a mythological subject, but with an event of recent history, the Greek defeat of the Persians at Salamis in 480 BC. Unlike Aeschylus' other surviving plays, it is apparently not part of a connected trilogy. In this new edition A. F. Garvie encourages the reader to assess the Persae on its own terms as a drama. It is not apatriotic celebration, or a play with a political manifesto, but a genuine tragedy, which, far from presenting a simple moral of hybris punished by the gods, poses questions concerning human suffering to which there are no easy…    
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Book details

List price: $187.50
Copyright year: 2009
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 8/27/2009
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 464
Size: 6.14" wide x 9.21" long x 1.14" tall
Weight: 1.936
Language: English

Aeschylus was born at Eleusis of a noble family. He fought at the Battle of Marathon (490 b.c.), where a small Greek band heroically defeated the invading Persians. At the time of his death in Sicily, Athens was in its golden age. In all of his extant works, his intense love of Greece and Athens finds expression. Of the nearly 90 plays attributed to him, only 7 survive. These are The Persians (produced in 472 b.c.), Seven against Thebes (467 b.c.), The Oresteia (458 b.c.)---which includes Agamemnon, Libation Bearers, and Eumenides (or Furies) --- Suppliants (463 b.c.), and Prometheus Bound (c.460 b.c.). Six of the seven present mythological stories. The ornate language creates a mood of…    

A.F. Garvie is Emeritus Professor of Greek at the University of Glasgow. He is the author of 'Aeschylus 'Supplices': play and trilogy' (1969); of editions of Aeschylus 'Choephori' (1986); Homer 'Odyssey VI-VIII' (1994); and Sophocles 'Ajax' (1998), and of 'The Plays of Sophocles' in this series.

Introduction
Historical Tragedy
Political Tragedy?
Persae as a Tragedy
Structure
Style
The Tetralogy
Staging
The Syracusan Production
The Text
The Manuscripts
Text
Hypothesis
Persae
Commentary
Metrical Appendix
Select Bibliography
Indexes
Greek Words
General