
Euripides: Trojan Women
Author(s): Barbara Goff (Author)
- Publisher: Bristol Classical Press
- Publication Date: 11 Dec. 2008
- Language: English
- Print length: 174 pages
- ISBN-10: 071563545X
- ISBN-13: 9780715635452
Book Description
Set at the end of the Trojan war, “Euripides’ Trojan Women” depicts the women of Troy as they wait to be taken into slavery. While choral songs recall the deaththroes of the great city, the scenes between the old queen, Hekabe, and the women of her family explore the consequences of the defeat, from the rape of Cassandra, through the triumphant selfexculpation of Helen, to the pitiful death of the child Astyanax, who is thrown from the walls of his ravaged city. Barbara Goff sets the play in its historical, dramatic and literary contexts, and provides a scenebyscene analysis which brings out the pace and intellectual vigour of the play. The main themes are fully discussed, and the book also introduces readers to the issues that have divided critics, such as the extent to which the play responds to the historical events of the Peloponnesian War. The final chapter, which deals with the reception of the play, offers new insights into several modern works.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Goff’s attractively produced interpretation of Euripides’ troubling play provides a basic overview of the work’s political context in fifth-century Athens, its characters, and the most important attempts to refashion it in the late twentieth century.
The Classical Bulletin (vol. 85)
The Classical Bulletin (vol. 85)
About the Author
Barbara Goff is Professor of Classics, University of Reading. She is the author of “The Noose of Words” (1990) and “Citizen Bacchae: women’s ritual practice in ancient Greece” (2004).
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