Lexington Books
Pages: 392
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4985-1843-7 • Hardback • July 2016 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-1-4985-1845-1 • Paperback • May 2018 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
978-1-4985-1844-4 • eBook • July 2016 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Mark Ringer is professor of theatre at Marymount Manhattan College.
PrefaceChapter One: Introduction: Euripides and the Boundaries of the HumanChapter Two: RhesusChapter Three: AlcestisChapter Four: MedeaChapter Five: The Children of HeraclesChapter Six: HippolytusChapter Seven: AndromacheChapter Eight: HecubaChapter Nine: The Suppliant WomenChapter Ten: ElectraChapter Eleven: Trojan WomenChapter Twelve: HeraclesChapter Thirteen: Iphigenia among the TauriansChapter Fourteen: IonChapter Fifteen: HelenChapter Sixteen: The Phoenician WomenChapter Seventeen: OrestesChapter Eighteen: The CyclopsChapter Nineteen: Iphigenia at AulisChapter Twenty: The BacchaeAfterword
Euripides and the Boundaries of the Human is a lucid, well-written and comprehensive overview of Euripides’ work. Each chapter gives a thoughtful and accessible introduction to one play and the scholarly debates surrounding it, which will be useful for both students and scholars.
— Laurel Bowman, University of Victoria
Mark Ringer provides a useful work that analyzes all nineteen of the extant plays attributed to Euripides in chronological order of each one’s commonly understood date of completion. . . All in all, this is a valuable contribution to research on Euripides’ works, and it will be a useful addition to many undergraduate and graduate libraries.
— The Classical Journal
In this useful survey of Euripides, Ringer (Marymount Manhattan College) contests the common view of the dramatist as an iconoclastic, ironic, and modern poet. In his introduction the author contends that Euripides’s vision of the gods is traditional and Homeric, and that he shows little evidence of advocating the rationalistic and sophistic views offered by many of his characters. Ringer devotes each of the 19 chapters to one play, in each chapter summarizing the plot and offering interpretation ...Ringer makes a solid argument for seeing Euripides as a poet who accepts tradition, even while portraying characters who do not. This study will not replace early surveys such as G. M. A. Grube's The Drama of Euripides (1941) and D. J. Conacher's Euripidean Drama (CH, Jul'68), or handbooks such as Albin Lesky's Greek Tragic Poetry (1972) and Edith Hall's Greek Tragedy: Suffering under the Sun (CH, Aug'10, 47-6703), but it deserves to be read alongside them. Summing Up:Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
— Choice Reviews
Euripides has often been overshadowed by Aeschylus and Sophocles, and his plays criticized for their happy endings, rhetorical excess, or shifting focus. Ringer admires Euripides and gives his less familiar plays their due.
— Ruth Scodel, University of Michigan
In this beautifully produced and highly readable introductory volume to Euripidean drama Ringer offers an insightful lengthy survey of the 19 surviving plays ascribed to Euripides. . . [it] not only serves as a valuable addition to an enormous amount of research work produced by a cohort of eminent scholars in recent decades on the dramas of Euripides, but also continues in the most creative and stimulating way possible a long and honoured humanistic tradition of Euripidean scholarship. . . . Overall this theoretically mature and always commonsensical and informative volume is a valuable contribution to the ever-expanding field of Euripidean studies. It is a work of high intelligence and exemplary scholarship, which is sophisticated enough to please experts and at the same time written in a clear and engaging manner accessible to a non-specialist audience.
— The Journal of Hellenic Studies
Euripides and the Boundaries of the Human is a lucid, well-written and comprehensive overview of Euripides’ work. Each chapter gives a thoughtful and accessible introduction to one play and the scholarly debates surrounding it, which will be useful for both students and scholars.
— Laurel Bowman, University of Victoria
Euripides has often been overshadowed by Aeschylus and Sophocles, and his plays criticized for their happy endings, rhetorical excess, or shifting focus. Ringer admires Euripides and gives his less familiar plays their due.
— Ruth Scodel, University of Michigan