Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 31st December 1963
Paperback
Published: 1st December 2001
Hardback
Published: 9th December 1994
The Theban Plays
By (Author) Sophocles
Introduction by E. Watling
Translated by E. Watling
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Classics
31st December 1963
26th April 1973
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
882.01
Paperback
176
Width 128mm, Height 197mm, Spine 11mm
135g
The legends surrounding the royal house of Thebes inspired Sophocles (496-406 BC) to create a powerful trilogy about mankind's struggle against fate. "King Oedipus" tells of a man who brings pestilence to Thebes for crimes he does not realize he has committed and who then inflicts a brutal punishment upon himself. With profound insights into the human condition, it is a devastating portrayal of a ruler brought down by his own oath. "Oedipus at Colonus" provides a fitting conclusion to the life of the aged and blinded king, while "Antigone" depicts the fall of the next generation, through the conflict between a young woman rules by her conscience and a king too confident of his own authority.
[Oedipus the King] is Sophocles most famous play and the most celebrated play of Greek drama . . . Aristotle cites it as the best model for a tragic plot . . . Freud recognized the plays power to dramatize the process by which we uncover hidden truths about ourselves . . . Sophocles is more interested in how Oedipus pieces together the isolated fragments of his past to discover who and what he is and in tracing the heros response to this new vision of himself.from the Introduction by Charles Segal
Sophocles was born in 496 BC. His long life spanned the rise and decline of the Athenian Empire. He wrote over a hundred plays, many of which are published as Penguin Classics, drawing on a wide and varied range of themes. E.F. Watling translated a range of Greek and Roman plays for Penguin, including the seven plays of Sophocles and the tragedies of Seneca.