An extraordinary drama of flight and rescue arising from women's
resistance to marriage, The Suppliants is surprising both for its exotic
color and for its forceful enactment of the primal struggle between male
and female, lust and terror, brutality and cunning. In his translation
of this ancient Greek drama, Peter Burian introduces a new generation of
readers to a powerful work of Aeschylus' later years. He conveys the
strength and daring of Aeschylus' language in the idiom of our own time,
while respecting what is essentially classical in this dramatist's art:
the rigor of the formal constraint with which he compresses high emotion
to the bursting point. The Suppliants, which is the first and only
surviving part of a trilogy, does not conform to our expectations of
Greek drama in that it has neither hero, nor downfall, nor tragic
conclusion. Instead the play portrays unresolved conflicts of sexuality,
love, and emotional maturity. These distinctly modern themes come alive
in a translation that re-creates the psychological immediacy as well as
the dramatic tension of this ancient work.
Originally published in 1991.
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