Incoming Resources
- The chorus in Sophocles' tragedies
- An introduction to the Greek theatre, by Peter D. Arnott ; with a foreword by H.D.F. Kitto
- Sophocles, an interpretation, R.P. Winnington-Ingram
- Tragedy and myth in ancient Greece, Jean-Pierre Vernant and Pierre Vidal-Naquet ; translated from the French by Janet Lloyd
- Time in Greek tragedy
- The Oresteia, Aeschylus ; translated by Tony Harrison
- Hippolytos, Euripides ; translated by Robert Bagg
- Catastrophe survived, Euripides' plays of mixed reversal, Anne Pippin Burnett
- Vision and stagecraft in Sophocles, David Seale
- Reading Greek tragedy, Simon Goldhill
- Ancient art and ritual, Jane Harrison
- Nietzsche on tragedy, M. S. Silk and J. P. Stern
- Women of Trachis, a version by Ezra Pound
- Studies in Aeschylus, R.P. Winnington-Ingram
- Studies in later Greek comedy, T.B.L.Webster
- The stagecraft of Aeschylus, the dramatic use of exits and entrances in Greek tragedy, by Oliver Taplin
- Greek tragedy in action, by Oliver Taplin
- Clouds ; [and], Women in power ; [and], Knights, Aristophanes ; translated [from the Greek] by Kenneth McLeish
- The eating of the gods, an interpretation of Greek tragedy, Jan Kott
- The Acharnians, Aristophanes ; translated by Douglass Parker
- The Acharnians; [and], The clouds; [and], Lysistrata, Aristophanes ; translated with an introduction by Alan H. Sommerstein
- The comic theatre of Greece and Rome, F.H. Sandbach
- Persuasion in Greek tragedy, a study of peitho, by R.G.A. Buxton
- Tragedy and civilization, an interpretation of Sophocles, Charles Segal