Menander: Samia (The Woman from Samos)
For eight centuries after his death Menander was the third most popular poet in the Greek-speaking world, and his plays, through Roman imitations and adaptations, engendered a tradition of European light drama that extends to our own day. But it is only since 1844 that some of the actual texts of Menander's plays have been rediscovered, mostly in Egyptian papyri. Two of these have given us four-fifths of the script of Samia (The Woman from Samos), a play of deception and misunderstanding in which a marriage that everyone desires almost fails to happen, two women and a baby are almost ruined, and a loving father almost loses his only son, because the people at home and the people abroad have both been doing things behind each other's backs - but somehow everything ends happily after all. This is the first full-scale edition with English commentary and is suitable for upper-level students.
- Describes the main features of New Comedy and explains key aspects of contemporary history and society
- Explains Menander's language, which will be unfamiliar to most students, while the Commentary discusses innovative usages in detail
- The Commentary discusses in detail the problems of restoring the fragmentary text
Reviews & endorsements
'… extremely valuable to scholars and students alike: it will enable instruction of Samia, enliven that of Menander, and contribute to the flowering study of New Comedy.' Alexandra Daly, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Product details
January 2014Hardback
9780521514286
380 pages
216 × 140 × 22 mm
0.59kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Samia
- Commentary.