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This new introduction to Euripides' fascinating interpretation of the story of Electra and her brother Orestes emphasizes its theatricality, showing how captivating the play remains to this day.
Electra poses many challenges for those drawn to Greek tragedy - students, scholars, actors, directors, stage designers, readers and audiences. Rush Rehm addresses the most important questions about the play: its shift in tone between tragedy and humour; why Euripides arranged the plot as he did; issues of class and gender; the credibility of the gods and heroes, and the power of the myths that keep their stories alive.
A series of concise and engaging chapters explore the functions of the characters and chorus, and how their roles change over the course of the play; the language and imagery that affects the audience's response to the events on stage; the themes at work in the tragedy, and how Euripides forges them into a coherent theatrical experience; the later reception of the play, and how an array of writers, directors and filmmakers have interpreted the original.
Euripides'
Electra has much to say to us in our contemporary world. This thorough, richly informed introduction challenges our understanding of what Greek tragedy was and what it can offer modern theatre, perhaps its most valuable legacy.
List of contents
Introduction
1. Theatrical and Performance Background
2. What Happens and How: The Unfolding of Euripides' Electra
3. Euripides and Myth: Reflecting and Re-Fashioning Tradition
4. Language
5. Characters and Actors
6. Props and Costumes, Bodies and Corpses
7. Gender and Sex, Children and Childbirth
8. Highs and Lows: Class Issues in Electra
9. Gods and Mortals
10. Afterlife
Conclusion
Glossary
Guide to Further Reading
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Rush Rehm is Professor of Drama and Classics at Stanford University, USA, and Artistic Director of Stanford Repertory Theater (https://stanfordreptheater.com/#); he works professionally as an actor and director when possible. He is the author of The Oresteia: A Theatre Version (1978), Greek Tragic Theatre (1992), Marriage to Death: The Conflation of Weddings and Funerals in Greek Tragedy (1994), The Play of Space: Spatial Transformation in Greek Tragedy (2002), Radical Theatre: Greek Tragedy and the Modern World (2003), and Understanding Greek Tragic Theatre (revised edition of Greek Tragic Theatre, 2016).
Summary
This new introduction to Euripides' fascinating interpretation of the story of Electra and her brother Orestes emphasizes its theatricality, showing how captivating the play remains to this day. Electra poses many challenges for those drawn to Greek tragedy – students, scholars, actors, directors, stage designers, readers and audiences. Rush Rehm addresses the most important questions about the play: its shift in tone between tragedy and humour; why Euripides arranged the plot as he did; issues of class and gender; the credibility of the gods and heroes, and the power of the myths that keep their stories alive.
A series of concise and engaging chapters explore the functions of the characters and chorus, and how their roles change over the course of the play; the language and imagery that affects the audience's response to the events on stage; the themes at work in the tragedy, and how Euripides forges them into a coherent theatrical experience; the later reception of the play, and how an array of writers, directors and filmmakers have interpreted the original.
Euripides’ Electra has much to say to us in our contemporary world. This thorough, richly informed introduction challenges our understanding of what Greek tragedy was and what it can offer modern theatre, perhaps its most valuable legacy.
Foreword
An overview for students of the context, interpretation and afterlife of Euripides' Electra
Additional text
Admirable ... impeccably edited and produced.