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The Clouds

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About This Book

An indebted father, desperate to escape creditors caused by his son's lavish habits, seeks out a school of new thinkers who promise techniques to argue any position and evade responsibility. Pupils are taught rhetorical tricks and moral inversion so that wrong can be defended as right, and lessons are enacted through debates and rehearsed disputation. A chorus representing the heavens frames the action and embodies the intellectual fashion being lampooned. Personified figures of Just and Unjust Causes confront one another in mock-legal contests, and the play satirically traces how sophistical education unsettles traditional values and produces comic social disorder.

About the Author

Aristophanes portrait

Aristophanes

Aristophanes was an ancient Greek playwright known for his sharp wit and satirical commentary on Athenian society and politics. Active during the 5th century BCE, he is often regarded as the father of comedy, contributing significantly to the genre with his innovative use of humor and social critique. His works, such as "Lysistrata," which humorously explores themes of war and gender, and "The Clouds," a critique of contemporary philosophy, showcase his ability to blend entertainment with profound commentary. Aristophanes' plays remain influential, reflecting the complexities of human nature and the socio-political landscape of his time.

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