A Commentary on the Rhesus Attributed to Euripides
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st Dec '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Rhesus, a tragedy traditionally (but wrongly) attributed to Euripides, has been the object of too little scholarly attention over the last decades. While debate has focused largely on the question of the play's authenticity, consequently overlooking the features of the play itself, this important new commentary explores the essential elements such as language, style, character-portrayal, and metre. The play's stagecraft and plot-construction are scrutinized and shown to be generally idiosyncratic and often defective despite occasional flashes of genius in the handling of dramatic time and theatrical space. Through the detailed introduction, translation, and commentary, Liapis shows that Rhesus is largely derivative, as it contains a significant amount of textual material taken from other classical tragedies and genres. The conclusion is that the contested author's familiarity with fifth-century drama bespeaks a professional actor, probably one specializing in re-performances of classical repertoire. Such evidence suggests that Rhesus can therefore be considered as not only a surviving fourth-century tragedy, but also one conceived for performance outside of Athens.
The opportunity afforded by a commentary on this scale, published by a distinguished press, will mean that for many scholars and students this will become the first point of contact on this important play. For them, the commentary will often be helpful * C.W. Marshall, Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada *
Students of fourth-century drama should be profoundly grateful to Liapis for providing, for the first time, a truly scholarly tool with which to begin making sense of the direction tragedy took after the death of Euripides. * David Sansone, Bryn Mawr Classical Review *
[T]he most thorough and detailed analysis of its kind ... The commentary accomplishes what it wants, and it does so on a very high scholarly level * Gunther Martin, Exemplaria Classica *
ISBN: 9780199591688
Dimensions: 240mm x 162mm x 30mm
Weight: 830g
382 pages