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Ajax (play)

Sophocles' Ajax, or Aias (/ˈæks/ or /ˈ.əs/; Ancient Greek: Αἴας [a͜í.aːs], gen. Αἴαντος), is a Greek tragedy written in the 5th century BCE. Ajax may be the earliest of Sophocles' seven tragedies to have survived, though it is probable that he had been composing plays for a quarter of a century already when it was first staged. It appears to belong to the same period as his Antigone, which was probably performed in 442 or 441 BCE, when he was 55 years old.[1] The play depicts the fate of the warrior Ajax, after the events of the Iliad but before the end of the Trojan War.

Ajax
The suicide of Ajax. Etrurian red-figured calyx-krater, c. 400–350 BCE.
Written bySophocles
ChorusSailors from Salamis
CharactersAthena
Odysseus
Ajax
Tecmessa
Messenger
Teucer
Menelaus
Agamemnon
MuteAttendants
Servants
Soldiers
Eurysaces
Place premieredAthens
Original languageAncient Greek
GenreTragedy

Plot

The play opens with a dialogue between Athena and Odysseus: After the great warrior Achilles had been killed in battle, there was a question as to who should receive his armor. As the man who now could be considered the greatest Greek warrior, Ajax felt he should be given Achilles’ armor, but the two kings, Agamemnon and Menelaus, awarded it instead to Odysseus. Ajax became furious about this and decided to kill the three of them. However, Athena stepped in and deluded Ajax into instead killing the spoil of the Greek army, which includes cattle as well as the herdsman. Athena gave false visions to Ajax, making him see the animals as humans.

Athena summons Ajax, who comes on stage and expresses his belief that he has slaughtered Agamemnon and Menelaus. He departs in order to hunt Odysseus. His concubine, Tecmessa, and the chorus discuss and describe Ajax's madness and terrible actions. They are interrupted by Ajax crying out from off-stage, as Ajax suddenly comes to his senses and realizes what he has done. Overwhelmed by shame, he decides to commit suicide. Tecmessa pleads for him not to leave her and their child, Eurysaces, unprotected. Ajax then gives his son his shield, and leaves the house saying that he is going out to purify himself and to bury the sword given to him by Hector. Teucer, Ajax’s half-brother, arrives. Teucer has learned from the prophet, Calchas, that Ajax should not be allowed to leave his tent until the end of the day or he will die. Tecmessa and soldiers then try to find Ajax, but they are too late. Ajax has indeed buried his sword – by impaling himself upon it. Before his suicide, Ajax calls for vengeance against the sons of Atreus (Menelaus and Agamemnon) and the whole Greek army. Tecmessa is the first one to discover Ajax’s body. Teucer then arrives and orders that Ajax’s son be brought to him so that he will be safe from foes. Menelaus appears and orders the body not to be moved.

The last part of the play is taken up with an angry dispute regarding what to do with Ajax’s body. The two kings, Agamemnon and Menelaus, want to leave the body unburied for scavengers to ravage, while Teucer wants to bury it. Odysseus arrives and persuades Agamemnon and Menelaus to allow Ajax a proper funeral. Odysseus points out that even one's enemies deserve respect in death. The play ends with Teucer making arrangements for the burial.

Ajax or Aias

The original title of the play in the ancient Greek is Αἴας. Ajax is the romanized version, and Aias is the English transliteration from the original Greek.[2] Proper nouns in Ancient Greek have conventionally been romanized before entering the English language, but it has been common for translations since the end of the 20th century to use direct English transliterations of the original Greek.[3]

The text of the play suggests the original pronunciation of Ajax's name in lines 430–432, Ajax (or Aias), the protagonist, states that it has an onomatopoeic resemblance to a wailing cry of lament: "aiai!"[4] Translators have treated this passage in different ways:

Aiai! My name is a lament!
Who would have thought it would fit
so well with my misfortunes!
Now truly I can cry out – aiai! –
two and three times in my agony.[5]

Aiee, Ajax! My name says what I feel;
who'd have believed that pain and I'd be one;
Aiee, Ajax! I say it twice,
and then again, aiee, for what is happening.[6]

Critical reception and analysis

 
Ajax preparing for suicide.

Ajax, as he appears in this play, in the Iliad, and other myths, is a heroic figure, a "rugged giant", with strength, courage and the ability to think quickly well beyond the normal standards of mankind. He was considered a legendary character to the people of ancient Athens. Numerous Homeric myths describe him coming to the rescue of his fellow man in dire moments.[7] Hugh Lloyd-Jones points out that many authorities consider Ajax an early play, but he suggests that if the text excludes material that he has bracketed, then it would seem to be a "mature masterpiece, probably not much earlier than Oedipus Tyrannus".[8][9] Lloyd-Jones considers various lines that have been taken by critics interpreting the play, and finds that some consider that the Greek gods are being portrayed by Sophocles as just, and that when Ajax suffers it is a learning-experience for the character and the audience. Other interpretations of the play, according to Lloyd-Jones, instead consider that Ajax is being portrayed heroically in defiance of the unjust and capricious gods. Lloyd-Jones, notes that Ajax’s murderous intentions in this play are not softened by the playwright, and the difficult aspects of his character are fully depicted, but in spite of that Sophocles shows profound sympathy for the greatness of Ajax, and appreciation for the bravery in Ajax’s realization that suicide is the only choice – if he is to maintain his conception of honor and his sense of self.[10]

In another interpretation, Robert Bagg and James Scully point out that the play is composed in two distinct parts; the first part is steeped in the old world, a world of kings and heroes, and the second part resembles more the democratic world of Sophocles’ Greece, and is marked by an imperfect debate of contending ideas. Bagg and Scully consider that the play, with its two parts, may be seen as an important epoch-spanning work that raises complex questions, including: How does 5th-century Greece advance from the old world into the new? Especially considering that Greece, in its stories and thoughts, clings and reveres the old world? And while clinging to the past, Greece considers that its new, democratic order is important and vital. As Bagg and Scully contend, Ajax, with his brute force has been a great warrior-hero of the old world, but the Trojan war itself has changed and become a quagmire; what’s needed now is a warrior who is intelligent – someone like Odysseus. Ultimately, according to Bagg and Scully’s interpretation, Ajax must still be respected, and the end of the play demonstrates respect and human decency with the promise of a proper burial.[11]

John Moore interprets the play as primarily a character study of Ajax, who, when he first appears covered in the blood of the animals that he in his madness has killed, presents an image of total degradation; the true action of the play, according to Moore, is how this image is transformed from degradation, as Ajax recovers his heroic power and humanity. The play, according to Moore, personifies in Ajax an affirmation of what is heroic in life.[12] Translators Frederic Raphael and Kenneth McLeish called the work a "masterpiece", arguing that "Sophocles turned the almost comic myth of a bad loser into a tragedy of disappointment, folly, and divine partiality."[13]

Bernard Knox considers Ajax’s speech on "time" to be "so majestic, remote and mysterious, and at the same time so passionate, dramatic and complex" that if this were the only writing we had of Sophocles, he would still be considered "one of the world’s greatest poets."[14] The speech begins:

Long rolling waves of time
bring all things to light
and plunge them down again
in utter darkness.[15]

In a study of the phenomenon of suicide bombers, one author, Arata Takeda, says that though in the end it doesn't quite work that way, Ajax’s death resembles that kind of strategy, when Ajax calls on the Erinyes, the “avenging deities of the underworld”, to destroy his foes.[16]

Performance history

The American director Peter Sellars staged an adaption of the play, also called Ajax, written by Robert Auletta at the Kennedy Center in New York and at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego in 1986.[17] The setting was relocated to the United States in the near future, having recently won a war in Latin America, which had, however, gone very badly.[17] Howie Seago played Ajax, Ralph Marrero played Menelaus, Aleta Mitchell played Athene, and Ben Halley Jr. was the leader of the chorus.[17] The set design was by George Tsypin and the costumes by Dunya Ramicova.[17][18]

Ajax was produced at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge in 2011, in modern dress, with a setting that appeared to be a war zone somewhere in the Middle East. It was translated by Charles Connaghan, and directed by Sarah Benson.[19]

In May 2016, Jeff S. Dailey directed the play for a limited Off Broadway run at the John Cullum Theatre in midtown Manhattan.[20][non-primary source needed] It set the play Sophocles' original location of Troy and featured Matthew Hansen in the title role.

Adaptations

Timberlake Wertenbaker's play Our Ajax, which was first performed in November 2013 at the Southwark Playhouse, London, was inspired by Sophocles' tragedy. It has a contemporary military setting, with references to modern warfare including the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Wertenbaker made use of interviews with current and former servicemen and women in developing the play.

English translations

 
The Belvedere Torso, a marble sculpture carved in the 1st century BCE depicting Ajax.

Notes

  1. ^ Finglass (2011a, 1–10), Harsh (1944, 91), and Moore (1969); Golder tentatively dates the play to 445–440 BCE (2010, 19); Woodruff states that "Women of Trachis and Ajax are generally considered fairly early" (2007, xiv); Watling argued that the "general shape and style place Ajax among the earlier works, and its position, in the oldest collections, at the head of the list, indicates a strong tradition of its having been the earliest of the extant plays" (1953, 7); Jebb argued that Ajax is later than Antigone (1896a, li–liv).
  2. ^ The translations by Michael Evans (1999) and James Scully (2011) use Aias, as do the translations by Golder and Pevear, by Lewis Campbell, and by Oliver Taplin.
  3. ^ Golder & Pevear, (1999, vi)
  4. ^ Esposito (2010, 190–192) and Jenkins (2015, 90).
  5. ^ Herbert Golder's translation in Burian and Shapiro (2010).
  6. ^ Frederick Raphael and Kenneth McLeish's translation in Slavitt and Bovie (1998).
  7. ^ Bagg and Scully (2011) p. 3.
  8. ^ Sophocles (1997). Sophocles I. Lloyd-Jones, H. (ed. and trans.). Cambridge, MA; London: Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0674995574.
  9. ^ Vickers, Michael (2014). Sophocles and Alcibiades: Athenian Politics in Ancient Greek Literature. Routledge. p. 4. ISBN 978-1317492924.
  10. ^ Lloyd-Jones (1994). p. 1
  11. ^ Scully (2011) p. 8
  12. ^ Moore (1957) p. 3.
  13. ^ Raphael, Frederic; McLeish, Kenneth (1998). "Translators' Preface". Sophocles, 1: Ajax, Women of Trachis, Electra, Philoctetes. By Sophocles. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 4. ISBN 0812216539.
  14. ^ Knox (1979, 125).
  15. ^ James Scully's translation, in Bagg and Scully (2011, 52).
  16. ^ Takeda, Arata (2010). "Suicide bombers in Western literature: Demythologizing a mythic discourse" (PDF). Contemporary Justice Review. 13 (4): 463–464. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.981.5792. doi:10.1080/10282580.2010.517985. S2CID 54018791.
  17. ^ a b c d Sullivan (1986).
  18. ^ "Robert Auletta | A.R.T."
  19. ^ Lambert (2011)
  20. ^ Prideaux, Terry. "AJAX". AJAX. Retrieved Sep 28, 2020.
  21. ^ Francklin (1759, v.1, i–ii & 1–90).
  22. ^ Buckley (1849, 239–285).
  23. ^ Plumptre (1878, 287–339).
  24. ^ Jebb's 1917 prose translation was previously published in 1896 adjunct to a Greek text of Sophocles' plays with commentary. The English translations of the plays were first published as a separate English-only volume in 1917.
  25. ^ Trevelyan (1919).
  26. ^ Watling (1953, 16–67).
  27. ^ Reprinted in Griffiths and Most (2013).
  28. ^ This text was used in Peter Sellars's 1986 production; see Sullivan (1986).
  29. ^ Lloyd-Jones (1994, 27–164).
  30. ^ Slavitt and Bovie (1998, 1–70).
  31. ^ Evans (1999, 2–42).
  32. ^ Burian and Shapiro (2010, 26–80).
  33. ^ Raeburn (2008).
  34. ^ Tipton (2008).
  35. ^ Bagg and Scully (2011, 13–98).
  36. ^ Brill's Companion to the Reception of Sophocles. Brill. 2017-04-03. ISBN 9789004300941.
  37. ^ "After Plateau, This Could Be Boston's Golden Age Of Theater". wbur. Retrieved 2018-02-11.
  38. ^ Taplin. (2015, 75)
  39. ^ Campbell (2015)

References

  • Bagg, Robert and James Scully, eds. 2011. The Complete Plays of Sophocles: A New Translation. By Sophocles. New York: Harper. ISBN 978-0062020345.
  • Buckley, Theodore Alois. 1849. The Tragedies of Sophocles, in English prose. London: Henry G. Bohn.
  • Burian Peter, and Alan Shapiro, eds. 2010. The Complete Sophocles: Volume II: Electra and Other Plays. Vol 2. Electra and Other Plays. By Sophocles. Greek Tragedy in New Translations ser. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195373301.
  • Campbell, Lewis. translator. 2015 Aias by Sophocles. Simon and Schuster.
  • Easterling, Pat. 2008. Introduction. In Raeburn (2008, xii–xxxiv).
  • Esposito, Stephen. 2010. "An Essay on Sophocle's Ajax." In Odysseus at Troy: Ajax, Hecuba and Trojan Women. Ed. Stephen Esposito. New York: Hackett. ISBN 978-1585103966. 189–210.
  • Evans, Michael, ed. 1999. Four Dramas of Maturity: Aias, Antigone, Young Women of Trachis, Oidipous the King. By Sophocles. The Everyman Library ser. London: Dent. ISBN 978-0460877435.
  • Finglass, P. J. 2011a. Introduction. In Finglass (2011b, 1–70).
  • ---, trans. and ed. 2011b. Ajax. By Sophocles. Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries ser. Vol. 48. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107003071.
  • Francklin, Thomas. [1758] 1759. The Tragedies of Sophocles, from the Greek. Vol. 1. London.
  • Golder, Herbert & Pevear, Richard, translators. 1999. Sophocles. Aias (Ajax) Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0195128192.
  • Golder, Herbert. 2010. Introduction. In Burian and Shapiro (2010, 1–22).
  • Grant, Michael. 1980. "Sophocles." Greek and Latin Authors 800 BC–AD 1000. New York: HW Wilson. ISBN 978-0824206406. 397–402.
  • Griffiths, Mark and Glen W. Most, eds. 2013. Sophocles II: Ajax, The Women of Trachis, Electra, Philoctetes, The Trackers. By Sophocles. The Complete Greek Tragedies ser. 3rd rev. ed. Original edition ed. David Grene and Richmond Lattimore, 1969. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226311555.
  • Harsh, Philip Whaley. 1944. A Handbook of Classical Drama. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804703802.
  • Jebb, Richard Claverhouse. 1896a. Introduction. In Jebb (1896b, ix–liv).
  • ---, trans. and ed. 1896b. Sophocles: The Plays and Fragments. Part VII. The Ajax. By Sophocles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1907 reprint available at the Internet Archive.
  • Jenkins, Thomas E. 2015. Antiquity Now: The Classical World in the Contemporary American Imagination. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521196260.
  • Knox, Bernard. 1979. "The Ajax of Sophocles." Word and Action: Essays on the Ancient Greek Theater. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801834097. 125–160.
  • Lambert, Bryce. "The Trojan Hurt Locker: The A.R.T.’s Ajax". Boston Lowbrow. February 24, 2011 [1]
  • Lloyd-Jones, Hugh. 1994a. Introduction. In Lloyd-Jones (1994b, 1–24).
  • ---, ed. & trans. 1994b. Sophocles: Ajax, Electra, Oedipus Tyrannus. By Sophocles. Loeb Classical Library ser. vol. 20. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674995574.
  • Meineck, Peter and Paul Woodruff, trans. and ed. 2007. Four Tragedies: Ajax, Women of Trachis, Electra, Philoctetes. By Sophocles. Hackett Classics ser. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett. ISBN 978-0872207639.
  • Moore, John. 1969. "Introduction to Ajax". In Griffiths and Most (2013).
  • Plumptre, Edward H. 1878. The Tragedies of Sophocles, a new translation. London: Daldy, Isbister & Co.
  • Raeburn, David, trans. and ed. 2008. Electra and Other Plays. By Sophocles. Penguin Classics ser. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0140449785.
  • Scully, James. 2011. Introduction. In Bagg and Scully (2011, 3–12).
  • Slavitt, David R. and Palmer Bovie, eds. 1998. Sophocles, 1: Ajax, Women of Trachis, Electra, Philoctetes. By Sophocles. Penn Greek Drama ser. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0812216530.
  • Sullivan, Dan. 1986. "Stage Review: Sellars' Ajax – More Than Games." Los Angeles Times Sept 2, 1986. Stage Review: Sellars' 'Ajax' – More Than Games
  • Taplin, Oliver. translator. 2015. Sophocles: Four Tragedies: Oedipus the King, Aias, Philoctetes, Oedipus at Colonus by Sophocles. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199286232
  • Tipton, John, trans. 2008. Ajax. By Sophocles. Chicago: Flood Editions. ISBN 978-0978746759.
  • Trevelyan, R.C., trans. 1919. The Ajax of Sophocles. By Sophocles. London: George Allen & Unwin.
  • Watling, E. F., trans. 1953. Electra and Other Plays. By Sophocles. Penguin Classics ser. London: Penguin. ISBN 0140440283.
  • Woodruff, Paul. 2007. Introduction. In Meineck and Woodruff (vii–xlii).

Further reading

  • Bradshaw, David (1991). "The Ajax Myth and the Polis: Old Values and New". In Pozzi, Dora; Wickersham, John (eds.). Myth and the Polis. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801424731.
  • Healy, Patrick (11 November 2009). "The Anguish of War for Today's Soldiers, Explored by Sophocles". The New York Times.

External links

  •   Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article: Αἴας
  • The Ajax, by Sophocles, Greek text edited by Richard Claverhouse Jebb (1869) at the Internet Archive
  •   Ajax public domain audiobook at LibriVox, Campbell translation.

ajax, play, other, uses, ajax, disambiguation, sophocles, ajax, aias, ancient, greek, Αἴας, aːs, Αἴαντος, greek, tragedy, written, century, ajax, earliest, sophocles, seven, tragedies, have, survived, though, probable, that, been, composing, plays, quarter, ce. For other uses see Ajax disambiguation Sophocles Ajax or Aias ˈ eɪ dʒ ae k s or ˈ aɪ e s Ancient Greek Aἴas a i aːs gen Aἴantos is a Greek tragedy written in the 5th century BCE Ajax may be the earliest of Sophocles seven tragedies to have survived though it is probable that he had been composing plays for a quarter of a century already when it was first staged It appears to belong to the same period as his Antigone which was probably performed in 442 or 441 BCE when he was 55 years old 1 The play depicts the fate of the warrior Ajax after the events of the Iliad but before the end of the Trojan War AjaxThe suicide of Ajax Etrurian red figured calyx krater c 400 350 BCE Written bySophoclesChorusSailors from SalamisCharactersAthenaOdysseusAjaxTecmessaMessengerTeucerMenelausAgamemnonMuteAttendantsServantsSoldiersEurysacesPlace premieredAthensOriginal languageAncient GreekGenreTragedy Contents 1 Plot 2 Ajax or Aias 3 Critical reception and analysis 4 Performance history 4 1 Adaptations 5 English translations 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPlot EditThe play opens with a dialogue between Athena and Odysseus After the great warrior Achilles had been killed in battle there was a question as to who should receive his armor As the man who now could be considered the greatest Greek warrior Ajax felt he should be given Achilles armor but the two kings Agamemnon and Menelaus awarded it instead to Odysseus Ajax became furious about this and decided to kill the three of them However Athena stepped in and deluded Ajax into instead killing the spoil of the Greek army which includes cattle as well as the herdsman Athena gave false visions to Ajax making him see the animals as humans Athena summons Ajax who comes on stage and expresses his belief that he has slaughtered Agamemnon and Menelaus He departs in order to hunt Odysseus His concubine Tecmessa and the chorus discuss and describe Ajax s madness and terrible actions They are interrupted by Ajax crying out from off stage as Ajax suddenly comes to his senses and realizes what he has done Overwhelmed by shame he decides to commit suicide Tecmessa pleads for him not to leave her and their child Eurysaces unprotected Ajax then gives his son his shield and leaves the house saying that he is going out to purify himself and to bury the sword given to him by Hector Teucer Ajax s half brother arrives Teucer has learned from the prophet Calchas that Ajax should not be allowed to leave his tent until the end of the day or he will die Tecmessa and soldiers then try to find Ajax but they are too late Ajax has indeed buried his sword by impaling himself upon it Before his suicide Ajax calls for vengeance against the sons of Atreus Menelaus and Agamemnon and the whole Greek army Tecmessa is the first one to discover Ajax s body Teucer then arrives and orders that Ajax s son be brought to him so that he will be safe from foes Menelaus appears and orders the body not to be moved The last part of the play is taken up with an angry dispute regarding what to do with Ajax s body The two kings Agamemnon and Menelaus want to leave the body unburied for scavengers to ravage while Teucer wants to bury it Odysseus arrives and persuades Agamemnon and Menelaus to allow Ajax a proper funeral Odysseus points out that even one s enemies deserve respect in death The play ends with Teucer making arrangements for the burial Ajax or Aias EditThe original title of the play in the ancient Greek is Aἴas Ajax is the romanized version and Aias is the English transliteration from the original Greek 2 Proper nouns in Ancient Greek have conventionally been romanized before entering the English language but it has been common for translations since the end of the 20th century to use direct English transliterations of the original Greek 3 The text of the play suggests the original pronunciation of Ajax s name in lines 430 432 Ajax or Aias the protagonist states that it has an onomatopoeic resemblance to a wailing cry of lament aiai 4 Translators have treated this passage in different ways Aiai My name is a lament Who would have thought it would fit so well with my misfortunes Now truly I can cry out aiai two and three times in my agony 5 Aiee Ajax My name says what I feel who d have believed that pain and I d be one Aiee Ajax I say it twice and then again aiee for what is happening 6 Critical reception and analysis Edit Ajax preparing for suicide Ajax as he appears in this play in the Iliad and other myths is a heroic figure a rugged giant with strength courage and the ability to think quickly well beyond the normal standards of mankind He was considered a legendary character to the people of ancient Athens Numerous Homeric myths describe him coming to the rescue of his fellow man in dire moments 7 Hugh Lloyd Jones points out that many authorities consider Ajax an early play but he suggests that if the text excludes material that he has bracketed then it would seem to be a mature masterpiece probably not much earlier than Oedipus Tyrannus 8 9 Lloyd Jones considers various lines that have been taken by critics interpreting the play and finds that some consider that the Greek gods are being portrayed by Sophocles as just and that when Ajax suffers it is a learning experience for the character and the audience Other interpretations of the play according to Lloyd Jones instead consider that Ajax is being portrayed heroically in defiance of the unjust and capricious gods Lloyd Jones notes that Ajax s murderous intentions in this play are not softened by the playwright and the difficult aspects of his character are fully depicted but in spite of that Sophocles shows profound sympathy for the greatness of Ajax and appreciation for the bravery in Ajax s realization that suicide is the only choice if he is to maintain his conception of honor and his sense of self 10 In another interpretation Robert Bagg and James Scully point out that the play is composed in two distinct parts the first part is steeped in the old world a world of kings and heroes and the second part resembles more the democratic world of Sophocles Greece and is marked by an imperfect debate of contending ideas Bagg and Scully consider that the play with its two parts may be seen as an important epoch spanning work that raises complex questions including How does 5th century Greece advance from the old world into the new Especially considering that Greece in its stories and thoughts clings and reveres the old world And while clinging to the past Greece considers that its new democratic order is important and vital As Bagg and Scully contend Ajax with his brute force has been a great warrior hero of the old world but the Trojan war itself has changed and become a quagmire what s needed now is a warrior who is intelligent someone like Odysseus Ultimately according to Bagg and Scully s interpretation Ajax must still be respected and the end of the play demonstrates respect and human decency with the promise of a proper burial 11 John Moore interprets the play as primarily a character study of Ajax who when he first appears covered in the blood of the animals that he in his madness has killed presents an image of total degradation the true action of the play according to Moore is how this image is transformed from degradation as Ajax recovers his heroic power and humanity The play according to Moore personifies in Ajax an affirmation of what is heroic in life 12 Translators Frederic Raphael and Kenneth McLeish called the work a masterpiece arguing that Sophocles turned the almost comic myth of a bad loser into a tragedy of disappointment folly and divine partiality 13 Bernard Knox considers Ajax s speech on time to be so majestic remote and mysterious and at the same time so passionate dramatic and complex that if this were the only writing we had of Sophocles he would still be considered one of the world s greatest poets 14 The speech begins Long rolling waves of time bring all things to light and plunge them down again in utter darkness 15 In a study of the phenomenon of suicide bombers one author Arata Takeda says that though in the end it doesn t quite work that way Ajax s death resembles that kind of strategy when Ajax calls on the Erinyes the avenging deities of the underworld to destroy his foes 16 Performance history EditThis section focuses too much on specific examples without explaining their importance to its main subject Please help improve this section by citing reliable secondary sources that evaluate and synthesize these or similar examples within a broader context May 2017 This section may show systemic bias It may require cleanup to conform to a higher standard of quality and to make it neutral in tone Please see the discussion on the talk page March 2020 The American director Peter Sellars staged an adaption of the play also called Ajax written by Robert Auletta at the Kennedy Center in New York and at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego in 1986 17 The setting was relocated to the United States in the near future having recently won a war in Latin America which had however gone very badly 17 Howie Seago played Ajax Ralph Marrero played Menelaus Aleta Mitchell played Athene and Ben Halley Jr was the leader of the chorus 17 The set design was by George Tsypin and the costumes by Dunya Ramicova 17 18 Ajax was produced at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge in 2011 in modern dress with a setting that appeared to be a war zone somewhere in the Middle East It was translated by Charles Connaghan and directed by Sarah Benson 19 In May 2016 Jeff S Dailey directed the play for a limited Off Broadway run at the John Cullum Theatre in midtown Manhattan 20 non primary source needed It set the play Sophocles original location of Troy and featured Matthew Hansen in the title role Adaptations Edit Timberlake Wertenbaker s play Our Ajax which was first performed in November 2013 at the Southwark Playhouse London was inspired by Sophocles tragedy It has a contemporary military setting with references to modern warfare including the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan Wertenbaker made use of interviews with current and former servicemen and women in developing the play English translations Edit The Belvedere Torso a marble sculpture carved in the 1st century BCE depicting Ajax Thomas Francklin 1759 21 Theodore Alois Buckley 1849 22 Edward Hayes Plumptre 1878 23 available at Wikisource Richard Claverhouse Jebb 1896 1917 24 available at Wikisource R C Trevelyan 1919 25 available at Wikisource E F Watling 1953 26 John Moore 1969 27 Robert Auletta 1986 28 Robert Cannon 1990 Hugh Lloyd Jones 1994 29 Frederick Raphael and Kenneth McLeish 1998 30 Michael Evans 1999 31 Herbert Golder and Richard Pevear 1999 32 David Raeburn 2008 33 John Tipton 2008 34 George Theodoridis 2009 prose full text Ian C Johnston 2009 verse full text James Scully 2011 35 Charles Connaghan 2011 36 37 Oliver Taplin 2015 38 Lewis Campbell 2015 39 Maura Giles Watson 2017 performance translation full text downloadableNotes Edit Finglass 2011a 1 10 Harsh 1944 91 and Moore 1969 Golder tentatively dates the play to 445 440 BCE 2010 19 Woodruff states that Women of Trachis and Ajax are generally considered fairly early 2007 xiv Watling argued that the general shape and style place Ajax among the earlier works and its position in the oldest collections at the head of the list indicates a strong tradition of its having been the earliest of the extant plays 1953 7 Jebb argued that Ajax is later than Antigone 1896a li liv The translations by Michael Evans 1999 and James Scully 2011 use Aias as do the translations by Golder and Pevear by Lewis Campbell and by Oliver Taplin Golder amp Pevear 1999 vi Esposito 2010 190 192 and Jenkins 2015 90 Herbert Golder s translation in Burian and Shapiro 2010 Frederick Raphael and Kenneth McLeish s translation in Slavitt and Bovie 1998 Bagg and Scully 2011 p 3 Sophocles 1997 Sophocles I Lloyd Jones H ed and trans Cambridge MA London Loeb Classical Library Harvard University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0674995574 Vickers Michael 2014 Sophocles and Alcibiades Athenian Politics in Ancient Greek Literature Routledge p 4 ISBN 978 1317492924 Lloyd Jones 1994 p 1 Scully 2011 p 8 Moore 1957 p 3 Raphael Frederic McLeish Kenneth 1998 Translators Preface Sophocles 1 Ajax Women of Trachis Electra Philoctetes By Sophocles University of Pennsylvania Press p 4 ISBN 0812216539 Knox 1979 125 James Scully s translation in Bagg and Scully 2011 52 Takeda Arata 2010 Suicide bombers in Western literature Demythologizing a mythic discourse PDF Contemporary Justice Review 13 4 463 464 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 981 5792 doi 10 1080 10282580 2010 517985 S2CID 54018791 a b c d Sullivan 1986 Robert Auletta A R T Lambert 2011 Prideaux Terry AJAX AJAX Retrieved Sep 28 2020 Francklin 1759 v 1 i ii amp 1 90 Buckley 1849 239 285 Plumptre 1878 287 339 Jebb s 1917 prose translation was previously published in 1896 adjunct to a Greek text of Sophocles plays with commentary The English translations of the plays were first published as a separate English only volume in 1917 Trevelyan 1919 Watling 1953 16 67 Reprinted in Griffiths and Most 2013 This text was used in Peter Sellars s 1986 production see Sullivan 1986 Lloyd Jones 1994 27 164 Slavitt and Bovie 1998 1 70 Evans 1999 2 42 Burian and Shapiro 2010 26 80 Raeburn 2008 Tipton 2008 Bagg and Scully 2011 13 98 Brill s Companion to the Reception of Sophocles Brill 2017 04 03 ISBN 9789004300941 After Plateau This Could Be Boston s Golden Age Of Theater wbur Retrieved 2018 02 11 Taplin 2015 75 Campbell 2015 References EditBagg Robert and James Scully eds 2011 The Complete Plays of Sophocles A New Translation By Sophocles New York Harper ISBN 978 0062020345 Buckley Theodore Alois 1849 The Tragedies of Sophocles in English prose London Henry G Bohn Burian Peter and Alan Shapiro eds 2010 The Complete Sophocles Volume II Electra and Other Plays Vol 2 Electra and Other Plays By Sophocles Greek Tragedy in New Translations ser Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195373301 Campbell Lewis translator 2015 Aias by Sophocles Simon and Schuster Easterling Pat 2008 Introduction In Raeburn 2008 xii xxxiv Esposito Stephen 2010 An Essay on Sophocle s Ajax In Odysseus at Troy Ajax Hecuba and Trojan Women Ed Stephen Esposito New York Hackett ISBN 978 1585103966 189 210 Evans Michael ed 1999 Four Dramas of Maturity Aias Antigone Young Women of Trachis Oidipous the King By Sophocles The Everyman Library ser London Dent ISBN 978 0460877435 Finglass P J 2011a Introduction In Finglass 2011b 1 70 trans and ed 2011b Ajax By Sophocles Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries ser Vol 48 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107003071 Francklin Thomas 1758 1759 The Tragedies of Sophocles from the Greek Vol 1 London Golder Herbert amp Pevear Richard translators 1999 Sophocles Aias Ajax Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0195128192 Golder Herbert 2010 Introduction In Burian and Shapiro 2010 1 22 Grant Michael 1980 Sophocles Greek and Latin Authors 800 BC AD 1000 New York HW Wilson ISBN 978 0824206406 397 402 Griffiths Mark and Glen W Most eds 2013 Sophocles II Ajax The Women of Trachis Electra Philoctetes The Trackers By Sophocles The Complete Greek Tragedies ser 3rd rev ed Original edition ed David Grene and Richmond Lattimore 1969 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226311555 Harsh Philip Whaley 1944 A Handbook of Classical Drama Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804703802 Jebb Richard Claverhouse 1896a Introduction In Jebb 1896b ix liv trans and ed 1896b Sophocles The Plays and Fragments Part VII The Ajax By Sophocles Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1907 reprint available at the Internet Archive Jenkins Thomas E 2015 Antiquity Now The Classical World in the Contemporary American Imagination Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521196260 Knox Bernard 1979 The Ajax of Sophocles Word and Action Essays on the Ancient Greek Theater Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801834097 125 160 Lambert Bryce The Trojan Hurt Locker The A R T s Ajax Boston Lowbrow February 24 2011 1 Lloyd Jones Hugh 1994a Introduction In Lloyd Jones 1994b 1 24 ed amp trans 1994b Sophocles Ajax Electra Oedipus Tyrannus By Sophocles Loeb Classical Library ser vol 20 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674995574 Meineck Peter and Paul Woodruff trans and ed 2007 Four Tragedies Ajax Women of Trachis Electra Philoctetes By Sophocles Hackett Classics ser Indianapolis IN Hackett ISBN 978 0872207639 Moore John 1969 Introduction to Ajax In Griffiths and Most 2013 Plumptre Edward H 1878 The Tragedies of Sophocles a new translation London Daldy Isbister amp Co Raeburn David trans and ed 2008 Electraand Other Plays By Sophocles Penguin Classics ser London Penguin ISBN 978 0140449785 Scully James 2011 Introduction In Bagg and Scully 2011 3 12 Slavitt David R and Palmer Bovie eds 1998 Sophocles 1 Ajax Women of Trachis Electra Philoctetes By Sophocles Penn Greek Drama ser Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0812216530 Sullivan Dan 1986 Stage Review Sellars Ajax More Than Games Los Angeles Times Sept 2 1986 Stage Review Sellars Ajax More Than Games Taplin Oliver translator 2015 Sophocles Four Tragedies Oedipus the King Aias Philoctetes Oedipus at Colonus by Sophocles Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199286232 Tipton John trans 2008 Ajax By Sophocles Chicago Flood Editions ISBN 978 0978746759 Trevelyan R C trans 1919 The Ajax of Sophocles By Sophocles London George Allen amp Unwin Watling E F trans 1953 Electra and Other Plays By Sophocles Penguin Classics ser London Penguin ISBN 0140440283 Woodruff Paul 2007 Introduction In Meineck and Woodruff vii xlii Further reading EditBradshaw David 1991 The Ajax Myth and the Polis Old Values and New In Pozzi Dora Wickersham John eds Myth and the Polis Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801424731 Healy Patrick 11 November 2009 The Anguish of War for Today s Soldiers Explored by Sophocles The New York Times External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Ajax Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Aἴas The Ajax by Sophocles Greek text edited by Richard Claverhouse Jebb 1869 at the Internet Archive Ajax public domain audiobook at LibriVox Campbell translation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ajax play amp oldid 1138453567, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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