Lysistrata

Front Cover
Signet Classic, 2001 - Drama - 128 pages
Written with bawdy abandon and unparalleled wit, Lysistratais at once a powerful indictment of the insanity of war, and a sexual comedy without peer in the history of theater. That it remains both popular and accessible to the contemporary reader proves that the issues and themes that make compelling art never grow outdated.

Douglass Parker's translation presents the play in contemporary language for the modern audience. As The New York Timesnoted, " Parker has a range that can encompass the gravity of Aristophanes as well as the delirious and scabrous wit."

Other editions - View all

About the author (2001)

Aristophanes was born, probably in Athens, c. 449 BC and died between 386 and 380 BC. Little is known about his life, but there is a portrait of him in Plato's Symposium. He was twice threatened with prosecution in the 420s for his outspoken attacks on the prominent politician Cleon, but in 405 he was publicly honored and crowned for promoting Athenian civic unity in The Frogs. Aristophanes had his first comedy produced when he was about twenty-one, and wrote forty plays in all. The eleven surviving plays of Aristophanes are published in the Penguin Classics series as The Birds and Other Plays, Lysistrata and Other Plays, and The Wasps / The Poet and the Women / The Frogs.

Bibliographic information