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Euripides: Electra: Edited with Introduction and Commentary

Autor David Kovacs
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 feb 2026
This volume presents a newly edited text of Euripides' Electra with a scene-by-scene and line-by-line commentary that addresses a wide variety of questions, including the nature of Euripidean tragedy. In his Introduction and across several discussions in the commentary, David Kovacs presents an alternative to the current scholarly consensus on Euripides. Scholars following this consensus tell us that Euripides' play is a cynical take on the old story of Orestes' and Electra's revenge on Aegisthus and Clytaemestra. Both of the principal figures, we are told, are morally diminished, Electra inter alia by her excessive hatred of Clytaemestra and Orestes by his cynical reliance on Aegisthus' hospitable nature to get himself invited to the sacrifice at which he will kill his host. It is also alleged that this play virtually excludes the gods, who are part and parcel of the tragic genre. Kovacs shows that these and similar unfavourable judgements fail to take note of the practice of the other tragedians and also overlook evidence from Euripides' text, such as the frequent mention of the gods, that locate the play squarely within the tragic genre. What emerges is a play that is well constructed and thematically integrated; a play whose novelties--and an Athenian audience would not have wanted a play on an oft-treated myth to lack novelty--are all new ways of producing tragic effects found also in Aeschylus and Sophocles; a play that gives greater scope to the tragic view of the universe than even the corresponding plays of Aeschylus and Sophocles, thereby confirming Aristotle's judgement that Euripides is 'the most tragic of the poets'; in short, a play that can be called a tragedy without qualification. The gap between Euripides' original manuscript and the earliest complete copy we possess is nearly two millennia. This volume makes a considerable number of suggestions for improving a Greek text that has been badly corrupted over this period of manual copying.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780192867131
ISBN-10: 019286713X
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 145 x 224 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Notă biografică

After receiving his doctorate from Harvard University in 1976, David Kovacs joined the classics faculty at the University of Virginia, where he taught Greek and Latin language and literature for forty years, the last eleven years as Hugh H. Obear Professor of Classics. He writes principally on Greek tragedy, Horace, and Ovid.

Recenzii

In its detailed approach to text and theme, Kovacs' commentary is a useful resource for any scholar working onTroades.
[A] welcome scholarly achievement. . . . The section on the place of Troades within a trilogy . . . is extremely useful for anyone working on Greek tragic drama. Kovacs, deploying the skills and judgment that have made him such a fine textual editor, carefully marshals the arguments for a connected trilogy, laying out in persuasive detail the evidence for the two lost plays and their thematic integrity with Troades. This approach makes his own focus on the major themes of Troades all the more compelling.
Since I have held substantially the same opinion for almost four decades, I am not inclined to raise an objection. On the connections between the three tragedies in the production of which Troades was a part, I have for a long time wavered between scepticism and agnosticism: Kovacs has overcome my doubts.
The Commentary matches the thoroughness of the Introduction and the examination of textual problems; it is followed by three Appendices, a Bibliography of sensible length, and Indices. This is an edition of exceptional quality, almost certain ... to be the subject of, for example, graduate seminars. I cannot recommend it too highly.