Ellen McLaughlin returns with a new collection of adaptations and modern reimaginings of classic Greek tragedies. Drawing on works by Sophocles, Homer, Aeschylus and more, these plays breathe fresh life into timeless questions and conflicts that still feel startlingly relevant today: Can civilization survive humanity’s basest instincts? What do we do about the human compulsion toward violence? Are we irreversibly transformed by the trauma of war and political strife, or is there a chance we can recover a part of our former selves? This collection includes the plays Ajax in Iraq (from Sophocles), Kissing the Floor (Sophocles), Penelope (Homer), Mercury’s Footpath (Euripides), and The Oresteia (based on Aeschylus’ trilogy Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers, and The Eumenides).
A follow-up volume to McLaughlin's The Greek Plays, this is a striking collection of modern adaptations inspired by classic Greek texts.
"Ellen McLaughlin is a dramatist of courage, intelligence, wit and lyricism... Her drama is the drama of witness, predicated on a deep faith in human sympathy: if she can describe precisely what sorrows our wickedness, confusion or indifference occasions, if she can make it possible for us to empathize with others who are suffering, we will surely change our ways and our world."