"Paul Roche...must be ranked among the great translators of the Greek dramas in our century."—Robert W. Corrigan
Presents translations of four plays by Euripides that revolve around the themes of religious scepticism, the injustices suffered by women, and the folly of war.
This series is designed to provide students and general readers with access to the nature of Greek drama, Greek mythology, and the context of Greek culture, as well as highly readable and understandable translations of four of Euripides ...
This edition also includes brand-new translations of Euripides’ Medea, The Children of Heracles, Andromache, and Iphigenia among the Taurians, fragments of lost plays by Aeschylus, and the surviving portion of Sophocles’s satyr-drama ...
In this first volume of a new Loeb edition of Euripides David Kovacs gives us a freshly edited Greek text of three plays and an accurate and graceful translation with explanatory notes.
This is a translation for students of Greek tragedy, particularly in courses on classics in translations or classical civilisation. It will also be useful for students of drama and of English and other literatures.
Three classic Greek tragedies are translated and critically introduced by Edith Hamilton. This book presents three of the greatest Greek tragedies translated by Edith Hamilton.
Walter has achieved 23 genius ratings, plus international literary awards in a variety of categories. Walter has won awards in nearly every category of writing that exists: poetry, novels, nonfiction, research, short story, plays, etc.
This new volume of three of Euripides' most celebrated plays offers graceful, economical, metrical translations that convey the wide range of effects of the playwright's verse, from the idiomatic speech of its dialogue to the high formality ...
This new translation of "The Bacchae--"that strange blend of Aeschylean grandeur and Euripidean finesse--is an attempt to reproduce for the American stage the play as it most probably was when...
Euripides was one of the three great tragedians of classical Athens, the other two being Aeschylus and Sophocles.