Written by Euripedes Directed by William Steele From the program: The Women of Troy is the third play in a trilogy, the remainder of which has been lost. The play stands on its own as an examination of the tragedy of victory with each of the participants sharing the tragic flaw. Euripides intended the play as a protest of Athenian policies. First produced in the midst of a long war with Sparta, it holds an obvious reference to the previous year\u27s slaughter of the citizens of Melos, a neutral island, by the Athenian army. The foreboding aura of conclusion that permeates the play proved prophetic as Athens surrendered to Sparta scarcely a decade later. It would be a mistake to assume that The Women of Troy is, merely, an anti-war protest. ...
Ancient Greek tragedy, a genre of plays written and performed by men, features many plays dominated ...
« Astyanax and the Athenian War Orphans. Challenging the City’s Ideology in Euripides’ Trojan Women ...
The women portrayed in Greek drama were often strong, courageous, and integral to the storyline. In ...
Fontbonne Theatre Introduction Greek tragedy has been called a school of patriotism and Euripides wa...
Program is for the play written by Euripides. The play follows the fate of the women of Troy after t...
A surprisingly young audience whooped with perverse pleasure at the end of the harrowing Women Of Tr...
The playbill for Taylor University’s Fall 1974 performance of The Trojan Women by Euripides. The Tro...
Was the ancient Athenian Euripides actually a proto-feminist? Euripidess writings have long been coo...
University of Minnesota, Morris production of The Trojan Women by Euripides and Brendan Kenelley, di...
The play by Euripides, set in the modern world, in which we see Troy in ruins, and a world reduced t...
In this dissertation, I approach the interpretation of a classical text in performance by examining ...
International audienceI wish to focus on the structure of the Trojan Women’s parodos and first episo...
The article is devoted to the consideration of the character of Helen in the tragedies of Euripides ...
Many have debated the possible performance of Seneca\u27s plays. Theatre Historians have polarizing ...
The programme was scanned from an original held in the University Archives.This play was produced un...
Ancient Greek tragedy, a genre of plays written and performed by men, features many plays dominated ...
« Astyanax and the Athenian War Orphans. Challenging the City’s Ideology in Euripides’ Trojan Women ...
The women portrayed in Greek drama were often strong, courageous, and integral to the storyline. In ...
Fontbonne Theatre Introduction Greek tragedy has been called a school of patriotism and Euripides wa...
Program is for the play written by Euripides. The play follows the fate of the women of Troy after t...
A surprisingly young audience whooped with perverse pleasure at the end of the harrowing Women Of Tr...
The playbill for Taylor University’s Fall 1974 performance of The Trojan Women by Euripides. The Tro...
Was the ancient Athenian Euripides actually a proto-feminist? Euripidess writings have long been coo...
University of Minnesota, Morris production of The Trojan Women by Euripides and Brendan Kenelley, di...
The play by Euripides, set in the modern world, in which we see Troy in ruins, and a world reduced t...
In this dissertation, I approach the interpretation of a classical text in performance by examining ...
International audienceI wish to focus on the structure of the Trojan Women’s parodos and first episo...
The article is devoted to the consideration of the character of Helen in the tragedies of Euripides ...
Many have debated the possible performance of Seneca\u27s plays. Theatre Historians have polarizing ...
The programme was scanned from an original held in the University Archives.This play was produced un...
Ancient Greek tragedy, a genre of plays written and performed by men, features many plays dominated ...
« Astyanax and the Athenian War Orphans. Challenging the City’s Ideology in Euripides’ Trojan Women ...
The women portrayed in Greek drama were often strong, courageous, and integral to the storyline. In ...