This edition contains ten of the nineteen surviving plays & fragments by Euripides, all of which are his best tragedies (and one comedy). I'm aware that the translator for my edition, Paul Roche, has written in his own guesses and inventions to fill in the gaps where missing lines appear, but since I'm reading this alongside another edition of Euripides' complete plays for comparison, I won't be taking that into account and instead will review the plays themselves.
My ratings for each individual play go like this:
Alcestis = 3 stars.
Hyppolitus = 4 stars.
Ion = 3 stars.
Electra = 5 stars.
Iphigenia in Aulis = 4 stars.
Iphigenia amongst the Taurians = 3 stars.
Medea = 4 stars.
The Bacchae = 3 stars.
The Trojan Women = 5 stars.
Cyclops = 3 stars.
So five of the plays got 3 stars, three got 4 stars, and only two got 5 stars. I didn't like Euripides as much as I had believed I would from the plays I'd known before, and it had to do mainly with his style, but also with two things besides:
a. his propensity to abuse the Deus ex machina resource; for all that he likes to chalk up disgraces and bad outcomes to human foibles and human emotions instead of the gods, he is too fond of having the gods drop out of nowhere to "solve" the messes in the last scene. He's not the only one, of course, it's a feature of Greek drama; but because he advocates for human accountability, his too frequent resorting to the gods is contradictory and lessens his arguments for personal responsibility. At least, with the others that also use this technique, there's symmetry in having the gods own up to what they've led humans to do.
b. He's not always consistent thematically or with characterisation, especially when he deviates from the most accepted version of a story or invents new elements. The plays Electra and Medea, Trojan Women and Andromache, and the Iphigenia duology are perfect examples. More on that below.
ELECTRA and TROJAN WOMEN
My favourite plays, as you can see by the rating, were Electra and Trojan Women. I admire Euripides' guts in producing an anti-war tragedy in the middle of the Peloponnesian War, when Athens was rushing headlong towards disaster, and I admire the Athenians for their tolerance and not having good old Euripides thrown to the dogs for it. At least Aristophanes' anti-war comedy could be excused on grounds of being a silly romp (with a very serious message), but Trojan Women doesn't make any effort to hide its seriousness, nor its poignant message on what war does to people on both sides, especially to women and children of the vanquished side, raped, starved, and sold as slaves. And the victor's side aren't unaffected either, with huge scores of old men and old women left childless and unattended at home, as well as helpless widows and orphans.
I also liked this rendition of Hecuba's tragic end instead of her being transformed into a she-dog to howl for her lost city and children, because of how dignified and regal she is while she receives blow after blow in each scene. Same for Andromache. As for Helen... heh, Euripides makes no secret of his loathing for the Spartan queen, in every single play that touches on the Trojan War or people involved in it he makes sure everyone's reminded of just how rotten she is. In this play, Helen tries to escape just punishment by arguing it's not her fault she eloped with Paris, but Priam's fault for not killing the infant, and then Aphrodite for promising her as a prize, that she tried to escape Troy, etc. The rebuke she gets from Hecuba and Menelaus is worth reading.
As for Electra's story. My opinion isn't exactly mainstream, as far as I can see, but I believe she had more reasons for wanting her mother dead than Clytemnestra had for murdering Agamemnon. I know the mainstream interpretation focuses on her love for her father (she had Freud name the Electra Complex after her for this very reason) and then rush to point out how undeserving Agamemnon is of this love for all he's done. To me, that's too narrow, and misses key points. Because, once it's seen through Electra's experiences, by putting oneself in her shoes and looking at it from her side, it makes sense. Let's see:
1. When Agamemnon left for Troy, Electra was a little girl. At this point, Agamemnon had done none of the things his wife argued for his murder, and by every account, even if he had done terrible things to Clytemnestra's former husband, he was a good father to his girls and was loved by them all, by Iphigenia in particular, his favourite. So, there was no reason for Electra to think poorly of her father, and that idealised image of him from her childhood had to persist.
2. The sacrifice of Iphigenia, the reason Clytemnestra has for killing her husband, isn't in The Iliad (surprise!). The legend is in other works, and has two outcomes, one in which the girl effectively dies on the altar, and another that has her surviving. Euripides chose the "she survived" version (and incurred into inconsistencies I'll comment on later), and Clytemnestra knows of it. What's more, Iphigenia herself begs her mother not to hate her father for this, since the sacrifice is god-ordained and not of his own devising and it's for the good of Greece (She'll change her tune in another play, another inconsistency). Electra seems to be aware of the sacrifice and the reasons for it happening, but I didn't see anywhere it's said she knows Iphigenia's destiny.
3. Cassandra is no reason to affect his daughters' opinion of Agamemnon. She's a prisoner of war, a slave, and as such can't choose what is done with her; it's a common practice of the time period and wouldn't reflect on someone's character to possess such captives. It'd be different if it were a free person in an affair with a married person, as is the case for Clytemnestra's lover.
4. After the murder, Clytemnestra allowed her lover, Aegisthus, to usurp the throne. Thus allowing her adulterous love to steal her children's inheritance. Electra was made to work like a slave in Aeschylus and Sophocles' plays, and is married off to a pauperised peasant in Euripides' play. In other words, her mother allowed her children to be robbed of their possessions and allowed her daughter to be enslaved. How's that for hating Clytemnestra?
5. Similarly, Clytemnestra allowed her lover to persecute and try to kill her son, Orestes. Why else would there be a need for the baby to be snatched from the palace and sent abroad to save his life? In some versions, it was Electra who saved her brother, in Euripides' it was the boy's tutor. So, if Clytemnestra allows her children to be dispossessed, allows a murder attempt on her son, and allows the mistreatment, enslavement and humiliating marriage of her daughter, all that gives the lie to her supposed maternal love and her vaunted maternal love for Iphigenia being the reason to kill her husband. It's just an excuse.
As you see, I do think Electra wasn't crazy. Yes, Agamemnon is still a questionable fellow, to say the least, but there's his image for his children and there's his image for his wife, and in this case, his daughter would be judging from what is done to her and her brother. Her mother was the Devil she knew, up close and personal, doing harm to her at home. Her absent father could live in her idealised remembrances; she doesn't have the omniscient view of an outside observer.
IPHIGENIA IN AULIS and IPHIGENIA AMONGST THE TAURIANS
It's interesting to see a couple Biblical parallels with these two plays, namely the Genesis story of Abraham being asked by God to sacrifice Isaac, his only son, to test his loyalty and faith; and upon obeying the command, a ram appears in Isaac's stead. Then there's the Judges story of Israelite leader Jephthah promising God that in exchange for victory he'd give up the first thing that'd come to greet him on his return home, and voilà, his only daughter comes to greet him.
Similarly, King Agamemnon foolishly promised the goddess Artemis his most precious and most loved possession, and then is told by a seer it has to be his favourite daughter. He balks at the suggestion, calling it monstrous, but his brother and the troops strong-arm him into accepting the sacrifice. employing a rather cruel ruse to lure his daughter and wife to Aulis for the sacrifice. He's found out, and quarrels ensue with his recalcitrant wife and weepy daughter. Only Achilles agrees to champion Iphigenia and save her from the sacrifice, though he later participates in the rituals on the altar, so I'd not be awarding him brownie points so quickly. Finally, Agamemnon is saved from carrying out this sacrifice by Artemis whisking the girl off and leaving a hind in her stead.
I have a problem with this version. A big problem: inconsistency. If Euripides chose this version instead of the one that has Iphigenia dying like Aeschylus and Sophocles did, how in the name of Hades is he going to make sense with the argument of his Electra play, where he has Clytemnestra saying explicitly that she hates her husband for what he did to Iphigenia? And it's not like she doesn't know, because in this very play she is told and is relieved that Iphigenia was saved even if she's disappeared. What's more, her daughter told her not to do what she eventually did. In any case, it takes away gravitas and negates the pathos of the motive for Agamemnon's murder.
Not to mention there's again the irritating Deus ex machina where it's not needed!
Then there's the continuation, Iphigenia amongst the Taurians, which to me is not only a mediocre play but also even more inconsistent than the former. For a start, Iphigenia's character has the stability of a yo-yo. Can you guess what she's doing amongst the Taurians? Hint: Artemis. Another hint: human sacrifice.
That's so. Sweet Iphigenia, who cried, begged, and eventually gave a grand oh-so-noble speech about sacrificing herself for the good of Hellas and living forever in legend, is a priestess for Artemis and performs human sacrifices. Sure, she justifies herself with that it's not she who is doing the sacrifices, she merely cleans and consecrates the human victims, so it's all right. What? But that's exactly what Agamemnon did, he wasn't going to execute her on the altar by his own hand, a priest would, yet she hates her dad with a passion now. What happened to noble feelings, forgiveness, and giving one's life for Hellas?
And it's only Greeks who are sacrificed, not the locals. She justifies this with her having come close to being victimised herself, so it's all right they're sacrificed. But the moment a couple of shipwrecked Greeks arrive to Tauris, she goes from I hate all Greeks, hate them so much, my dad especially to Hooray! Take me back home to Hellas, brother, I wanna go home.
I'm not inclined to believe Euripides was playing with irony here. He's done irony and paradox in other plays, and better than this. It's just poor characterisation.
HIPPOLYTUS and MEDEA
The first of these plays shows what Euripides can do with ironic plot twists. The story is about Theseus' bastard son, Hippolytus, an extremely handsome youngster that kindles the insane passion of his stepmother, Phaedra. Problem is, Hyppolytus must be the first asexual male in Western literature, because he has absolutely zero interest in coupling with women. And no, it's not because he prefers men instead. It's because he really, really doesn't have any interest of a sexual or romantic nature, and he's dedicated his chastity to a goddess.
And since this is Greek drama and you can't have people approaching unrequited love with a mature attitude (what would we be reading if so?), Phaedra wastes away pining for Hot Stepson. Her nurse tries to "cure" her by suggesting to Hippolytus that he reciprocate. Talk about stupid ideas. Hippolytus chews her out, not only because he has no sexual interest but because the woman is suggesting he betray his father by shagging his wife. Phaedra learns of the betrayal of his confidante, and hangs herself in fear that Theseus will find out. But not before she writes a suicide note in which she lies that her stepson tried to rape her. See? False accusations of rape are as old as time.
I liked the play for the plot, not for the characters, which aren't likable. There's other versions of the story, all of which make Theseus the biggest fool and the most unjust, and in which Phaedra is more malicious than she is here. Euripides has "softened" it by making her more a weak and rather foolish girl than a vindictive harpy, and it works well enough, for the outcome is the same.
Medea is another play that shows how to weave a great story with horrible people in the leading role. Medea and Jason "deserve each other," as the saying goes, and it's a pity that the innocent are the only real victims.
I am not sure I suscribe to the interpretation that this is about the mistreatment of women in marriage, because if that was Euripides' intention, then he blew his case up to the stratosphere by choosing Medea as his mouthpiece, and by introducing what's believed his own invention: the killing of her sons by her own hand. For a start, Medea is no simple downtrodden girl married off against her will to some old dodderer, and has no choice but to obey him, keep the house, and pop out babies. She's a powerful witch, daughter of a god, and chose Jason of her own volition. Nobody forced her to elope with him. Nobody married her to him because of an arrangement by her parents. She chose, regardless of the excuse that it was Hera who told Aphrodite to make her fall in love with Jason (an excuse Euripides himself mocked in another play).
So, poster gal for feminine oppression, Medea isn't. In the Argonautica, she is painted as a very unstable woman, prone to violent mood swings, so violent she prefers to commit suicide because she can't handle her "love" for Jason, wishes he'd never come to her island, wishes him dead and herself dead, etc. In such a very manic and unstable woman, it's no wonder her "love" would be a pathological obsession. And Jason is no innocent, either, because he used her for getting the Golden Fleece, promised her marriage, and went on with the promise even after witnessing with his own eyes the revolting crimes Medea was capable of for "love" of him.
I mean, "the things I do for love" sounds nice and all. But if there's more red flags in your relationship than in a Soviet Union victory parade, then what right do you have to be surprised that your beloved turned out to stab you in the back? Accountability is something Euripides isn't doing well here. You should own up to making a bad choice of mate, and not victimise yourself because the liar and cheater you slept with (fully knowing he was a liar and cheater) left you pregnant and washed his hands of you. Then there's the fact that Jason wasn't even cheating on her, he chose to cast her aside to make a more advantageous political marriage, something common for ruling classes throughout history, and her reaction is . . . to kill the innocent Glauke, who unlike Medea is coming to this marriage because it's arranged and not of her free choice. How's that for injustice?
Killing her sons is just more of the same. And a bigger injustice. Euripides chooses to make her not pay for her crimes but conveniently flee for refuge to Athens. At least in the versions where she isn't responsible for the deaths of her sons or of Glauke there's a point to her seeking refuge, and seeing herself as a victim makes more sense. But not in this play. She's simply not right in the head, never was, and the husband she took for herself worsened her insane behaviour.