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Oxford Readings in Aristophanes

Edited by Erich Segal

Price: £32.00 (paper)
ISBN-13: 978-0-19-872157-4
Publication date: 23 May 1996
360 pages, 216x138 mm

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Reviews
  • 'Abridgement, revision and omission of footnotes are ubiquitous. The aim is primarily to make life easier for the Greekless reader.' - Times Literary Supplement
  • 'It is a pleasure to see a new volume of collected essays on Aristophanes appear ... the current volume will find a permanent place on the shelves of numerous undergraduate and undergraduate libraries in this country and perhaps even in the collections of some individual scholars.' - Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Description
This anthology should be a `must' for all serious students of Aristophanes. It brings together for the first tinme in one volume all the most important contributions to the study of Aristophanes published over the last several decades - providing an ideal resource for anyone studying the plays. Aristophanes is the only surviving author of Greek Attic comedy who has left us more than fragments, and his eleven surviving plays reflect the spirit of Athens in the golden age - and its unique freedom of speech. The book deals not only with the better known comedies like Clouds and Birds , but also the later, more unusual works like The Assembywomen and Wealth , which represent important stages towards the evolution of modern comedy. Subjects range from the classic question of Aristophanes' relationship to contemporary politics to more modern issues such as feminism, gender, performance context, and the interaction between fifth century comedy and tragedy. Many of the contributions are not otherwise readily available to students and teachers, coming from foreign journals and books, difficult to obtain. All the greek has been translated for the benefit of students reading the plays in English.

Readership: Students of classical literature, especially Greek comedy.

Authors, editors, and contributors


Edited by Erich Segal, Fellow, Wolfson College, Oxford


Links to web resources and related information
More in the same subject area:
Plays & playwrights: classical, early & medieval

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