Cover of The Trojan Women

The Trojan Women

Written by Euripides

Contributor Jean-Paul Sartre

Translated by Ronald Duncan

Out of stock1 listing across 1 seller

This is a new translation of the classic play. It combines a poet's translation with a scholar's introduction and notes.

Among surviving Greek tragedies only Euripides' Trojan Women shows us the extinction of a whole city, an entire people. Despite its grim theme, or more likely because of the centrality of that theme to the deepest fears of our own age, this is one of the relatively few Greek tragedies that regularly finds its way to the stage. Here the power of Euripides' theatrical and moral imagination speaks clearly across the twenty-five centuries that separate our world from his.

The theme is really a double the suffering of the victims of war, exemplified by the woman who survive the fall of Troy, and the degradation of the victors, shown by the Greeks' reckless and ultimately self-destructive behavior. It offers an enduring picture of human fortitude in the midst of despair.

Trojan Women gains special relevance, of course, in times of war. It presents a particularly intense account of human suffering and uncertainty, but one that is also rooted in considerations of power and policy, morality and expedience. Furthermore, the seductions of power and the dangers both of its exercise and of resistance to it as portrayed in Trojan Women are not simply philosophical or rhetorical gambits but part of the lived experience of Euripides' day.

Other listings

Goldsboro Books

Hardback · Hamish Hamilton · First edition · First printing

First Edition, First Printing

ISBN 9780048820426

Out of stock
£30.00
UnsignedUK first editionFirst printing
History
First seen· Out of stock · £30.0016 Apr 2026

Last confirmed 15 Jul 2026

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