Explore the world of ancient Greek tragedy through detailed summaries and expert commentary.
This concise volume surveys the major tragedians, including Sophocles, Euripides, and Aeschylus, and explains how their plays shaped Western drama. It blends plot outlines with insights into structure, myth, and stagecraft, helping readers understand how these works were performed and received in ancient Athens.
- Clear overviews of pivotal plays such as Seven Against Thebes, Agamemnon, the Choephorae, and the Bacchae, with attention to characters, stakes, and outcomes
- Notes on dramatic form, including the use of choruses, ritual elements, and the unity (or non‑unity) of place and time on stage
- Commentary on themes like fate, justice, power, and the tension between human action and divine will
- Context about the authors’ aims, audience response, and how later writers reinterpreted these works
Ideal for readers of classical drama, students studying ancient theatre, or anyone seeking a compact guide to Greek tragedy and its major figures.