An alternative to this The Three Theban Plays (Penguin Classics) is kiDs Puzzle Indonesia's teak wood puzzles and kids wooden puzzles. These wood puzzle products are available for wholesale wood puzzle buyers.
The Three Theban Plays (Penguin Classics)
Today's shopping tips: "Be wise in purchasing ..... find best value one"


List Price: $12.00
Our Price: $4.90
You Save: $ 7.10 ( 59% )
(prices subject to change)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Average Ratings:





Antigone defending her integrity and ideals to the death, Oedipus questing for his identity and achieving immortality - these heroic figures have moved playgoers and readers since the fifth century BC. Towering over the rest of Greek tragedy, these three plays are among the most enduring and timeless dramas ever written. Robert Fagles' translation conveys all of Sophocles' lucidity and power: the cut and thrust of his dialogue, his ironic edge, the surge and majesty of his choruses and, above all, the agonies and triumphs of his characters.
DESCRIPTION:
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 882.01
EAN: 9780140444254
ISBN: 0140444254
Label: Penguin Classics
Manufacturer: Penguin Classics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 430
Publication Date: 2000-01-03
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Studio: Penguin Classics
SIMILAR ITEMS:
• The Oresteia: Agamemnon; The Libation Bearers; The Eumenides (Penguin Classics)
• The Odyssey
• The Iliad (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)
• The Odyssey (Penguin Classics)
• The Trial and Death of Socrates
CUSTOMER REVIEWS:
Customer Rating:





Summary: The Best of Both Worlds
Comment: To anyone who cares for classic theatre, the Theban plays by Sophocles are among the best to be found. And to anyone who reads the classics of Greece or Rome -- regardless of genre -- the translations of Robert Fagles are the absolute best. Here we have the best plays by the best translator. The introduction by Bernard Knox should be of special value for those not terribly familiar with the trilogy, and his notes should be useful for all readers.
Customer Rating:





Summary: Translation isn't transliteration
Comment: I try to reread Sophocles every few years, both because I enjoy him and because I find him a moral tonic. Since I can only haltingly stumble through his Greek, I always read translations, and I read a different translation each time.
When one reads a translated literary work, one is reading a piece of literature that, in a manner of speaking, is "co-authored." Translation isn't, can't, and oughtn't to be a mechanically isomorphic transliteration of the original text. Translators--good ones, anyway--are artists in their own right. The choices they make in deciding how best to render the original text reflects not only their own creative sensitivity, but also their cultural context. Different translators, because of the variability of their temperaments, talents, and times, focus on different inflections. (In this regard, they're not unlike stage directors, who also "co-author" the plays they present.) So one never reads Sophocles, unless one reads the original Greek. One always reads Fagles' Sophocles, or Fitzgerald's Sophocles, or X's Sophocles.
I think Fagles and Sophocles make a marvelous collaboration. In fact, I like this translation better than any other I've read over the past half-century (and I've liked some others very much). Fagles has the soul of a poet (his volume of poems, I, Vincent, is very good indeed), and his rendering of "Antigone" and "Oedipus the King" are especially fine. Like all translators, he has a spin that mirrors the fears and hopes of his own time. In Fagles' case, it's what the existentialists would call nausea or anxiety over the absurd contingency of existence. For example, Oedipus the King [1442], after learning of his unhappy fate:
...the agony! I am agony--
where am I going? where on earth?
where does all this agony hurl me?
where's my voice?
winging, swept away on a dark tide--
My destiny, my dark power, what a leap you made!
What more could one ask of a translator than that s/he remain loyal to the ancient text being interpreted while rendering it in such a way as to speak to contemporary readers? For translators aren't transliterators or transcribers. They're not secretaries. They're artists.
Customer Rating:





Summary: Must Have for Serious Study
Comment: No one can study the greek classics without these titles; a spring board to other works. Page layouts are easily read (numbered and indexed with referent notes). Each offering is accompanied by its own introduction loaded with connections!
Customer Rating:





Summary: DRAMA
Comment: The three Theban plays are a great way to introduce high school student into classical Greek literature. While the introductions can be lengthy, and give away the story, the plays are quite short and good for students like myself with the attention span of a infant. Both plays a very dramatic and filled with scandal which is something that the tens of today can relate to. The first play, Antigone, tells of a woman who fights for her right to give her brother a proper burial, and even though she is dating the son of the king she is sentenced to death. This causes uproar within the royal family eventually showing that the king's rash actions and need for power leads to the dismantling of his own household.
The second play, Oedipus the King, tells the tale the grown son of the king of Thebes that had been given away at birth, in an effort to avoid a prophecy by a blind prophet. Everything that they tried to avoid comes true in the most unfortunate of fashions. For those who enjoy the modern media it can be compared to a celebrity sex scandal.
Customer Rating:





Summary: Excellent But Not The Best; 4.5 Stars
Comment: This is a fine translation of Sophocles' great Oedipus trilogy. Fagles has rendered these plays into fluent English with a fine feel for how to vary the nature of the language between characters and scenes. That said, I still prefer the older Fitts/Fitzgerald translations, which are a model of restrained but powerful poetic expression. I think Fagles' translations of Homer are the finest available but he has not done quite as well with these plays. A very nice feature of this edition are the fine introductions to the plays and a short discussion of the history of the texts.

NOTE: All online transactions are processed at Amazon.com's secure server, using the latest technology on internet's secure transactions.
This Amazon.com's Children & Education Books, and Parenting Books .... is brought to you by kiDs Puzzle Indonesia, indonesian exporter of kid wooden puzzle and child wood puzzle (© 2005-2008)
We recommend PowWeb.com for web hosting.
We recommend PowWeb.com for web hosting.
Amazon.com Children Books offers best-buy kids and infants educational toys for your children learning development needs. In addition to this kids and infants educational toys, also available: children books, education books, and parenting books.

