Why Should I Buy This Book?
Greek Classics have long been the bedrock of a proper and
thorough education. Reading about the tracks and lives of our ancestors
cannot help but uplift us in our current life's path as it arms us with
lessons of the past. Tomes have been written on the subject, but to put it
in very modern, even economic terms, a recent article in the NY Times put it
into such a perspective with an article on what books one finds on the
shelves of the world’s most successful CEO’s. The article points out that
one doesn’t find “how-to-business books” on their shelves, but rather works
of philosophy, poetry, Greek classics, and other books of general knowledge.
Knights
by Aristophanes (c. 446 to c. 386 BC ), the greatest writer of Old
Comedy, is a bawdy, incisive, and evocative satire on Athenian political
life during the Peloponnesian War. The play is a fierce and sustained
attack on one of the most popular politicians of the day, the pro-war
demagogue Cleon, who had prosecuted Aristophanes for one of his earlier
works. Beyond that, Knights is a scathing indictment of corrupt
politicians in general (hence, very modern in its insights). In the
play, two slaves decide to prepare a sausage seller, an uneducated
ex-prostitute, for political life, on the ground that he already has all
the necessary qualifications for successful leadership in democratic
Athens. Their efforts culminate in a challenge to the most prominent
leader of the polis and the eventual success of the sausage seller in
taking over control of the city. Knights won first prize in the drama
festival when it was first produced in 424 BC. .Ian Johnston’s new
translation captures the comic energy and the moral seriousness of this
famous play. This text will be particularly useful for those who wish to
stage readings or full productions of the play. The translation provides
notes to assist the reader with the many references to Aristophanes’
contemporaries.
This play can be previewed by following the link to the
preview page for this title.