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I find Sophocles telling of these events to be more compelling than Aeschylus' account in The Libation Bearers. Electra is a very well written character.
I managed to read this in the Anne Carson translation, thanks to a friend. There's an immediate difference in how Sophocles comes off in Carson's translation compared to the usual translators of classics I've been reading before. It's fresh & vivid, with lines that read like poetry. There's an epigrammatic quality that proves to be particularly striking in a tragedy. Most of all, this is play depicts the powerful force between mother & daughter—
Revenge is not one of my favourite themes in literature, but I do love madness. Edmonton Opera put on a thrilling punk-goth show last night.
The very last #historymonth post! A beautiful book Art and Archeology of the Greek World. Full of amazing pictures! And some of my favourite plays, Aeschylus' three part Oresteia on Orestes, the son of Agamemnom. And Sophocles' Elektra (and other plays) , Elektra is Orestes' sister and they plot to kill their mother. Beautiful tragedy. And the very interesting Symposion by Plato, where the nature of love is discussed.