Aeschylus

WARNING

You are viewing an older version of the Yalebooks website. Please visit out new website with more updated information and a better user experience: https://www.yalebooks.com

John Herington

View Inside Format: Paper
Price: $25.00
YUP
Our shopping cart only supports Mozilla Firefox. Please ensure you're using that browser before attempting to purchase.

Aeschylus can be called the creator of the art of tragedy in the Western tradition.  Author of the first dramas that have survived in their entirety, he was also one of the world’s greatest lyric and imaginative poets.  This book by John Herington is designed to introduce all aspects of his majestic achievement to the general reader.
Herington begins by sketching the background to Aeschylus’ plays.  He first explains the very ancient mythical conception of our universe in which Aeschylus was brought up and which continued to shape his dramaturgy and poetic expression throughout his career.  Herington next discusses Athens and the momentous transition that it was experiencing during Aeschylus’ later years: the transition from age-old traditional ways of life and thought to the Periclean Enlightenment.  The background material concludes with a description of the contemporary Athenian theater, which also was undergoing a crucial transition from a primarily choral performance toward an art that could be described as drama.
In the second half of the book, Herington focuses on the plays of Aeschylus, providing many illustrative quotations that he himself has translated.  There is a chapter on the poetry of the lost plays as they are revealed in ancient quotations and descriptions.  There are then expositions of the seven extant tragedies, all of which were produced in the period between 472 B.C. and Aeschylus’ death in 456.  Each play is presented to the reader not so much in summary as in vivid scenario, with concentration on the climactic points at which Aeschylus orchestrated all his poetic, histrionic, musical, and choreographic resources.  Herington suggests that the sequence of the extant plays as a whole constitutes a commentary by this very great poet on the intellectual, political, and religious upheaval taking place in Athens during his last years, and that therein lies part of the endless fascination of the plays.   

"Invaluable."—Michael Payne, CEA Forum

"Herington produces an excellent introduction to a tragedian whose virtues might not otherwise be fully appreciated at first reading. . . .  Herinton's enthusiasm for recapturing the vitality of Aeschylus' drama shows through on every page."—Choice

"It adheres closely to the goal of aiding the modern, nonspecialist reader in approaching the ancient author."—Phyllis Culham, Classical Bulletin

"A reliable and readable introduction to Aeschylus."—A.F. Garvie, Journal of Hellenic Studies

"Herington succeed[s] in conveying to the reader something of the majesty of Aeschylus' lyric, dramatic, and imaginative genius while at the same time placing him within his own specific historical context."—John E. Rexine, Colgate University
ISBN: 9780300036435
Publication Date: September 10, 1986
204 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/4
Ovid

Sara Mack; Edited by John Herington

View details
Hermes Books Series
Horace

David Armstrong

View details
Ovid

Sara Mack; Edited by John Herington

View details
Hesiod

Robert Lamberton

View details
Pindar

D. S. Carne-Ross

View details
Homer

Vivante, Paolo

View details
Plutarch

Robert Lamberton; Foreword by John Herington

View details