[{"id":180446,"title":"Frogs","subtitle":null,"description":"Frogs was staged at the Lenaea festival in 405 B.C. and won first prize. It is a \"philological comedy\", as its central theme revolves around the oeuvre of Aeschylus and Euripides. As usual, there are political implications too… Frogs seems to be Aristophanes' way of settling the score with Euripides, who advocated genuine social and political reform as the only cure for the ills of Athens. Aristophanes, however, felt that the city could only regain its former glory by looking back to the grand theocratic era of Aeschylus, the earliest of the three great tragic poets, who set such high store by morals and duty... ","image":"http://www.biblionet.gr/images/covers/b183571.jpg","isbn":"978-960-501-862-7","isbn13":"978-960-501-862-7","ismn":null,"issn":null,"series":{"id":10671,"name":"The comedies of Aristophanes in comics","books_count":2,"tsearch_vector":"'aristophanes' 'comedies' 'comics' 'in' 'of' 'the'","created_at":"2017-04-13T02:31:12.923+03:00","updated_at":"2017-04-13T02:31:12.923+03:00"},"pages":null,"publication_year":2012,"publication_place":"Αθήνα","price":"3.0","price_updated_at":"2012-10-23","cover_type":null,"availability":"Κυκλοφορεί","format":"Βιβλίο","original_language":null,"original_title":"Βάτραχοι","publisher_id":323,"extra":null,"biblionet_id":183571,"url":"https://v2.bibliography.gr/books/frogs.json"},{"id":180494,"title":"Ladies' Day","subtitle":null,"description":"In every era, comedy’s backbone and sinew is the element of exaggeration. In the case of the play Ladies'day, that was presented at the Great Dionysia of 411 B.C., the over exaggerated issue is Euripides’ loathing of women! So here we have a comedy that aims its arrow at one man alone and undoubtedly offers us a very colorful portrait of the personality and work of the renowned playwright! Euripides, much like Aristophanes, could see the cracks in the foundations of ancient greek society. However, the solutions (both political and social) that he suggested weren’t to Aristophanes’ liking. Aristophanes, let’s not forget, was a great fan of the heroic but also modest era of Aeschylus. So he grabbed every chance he could to mock and humiliate the last of the three major tragic poets of antiquity. ","image":"http://www.biblionet.gr/images/covers/b183619.jpg","isbn":"978-960-501-864-1","isbn13":"978-960-501-864-1","ismn":null,"issn":null,"series":{"id":10671,"name":"The comedies of Aristophanes in comics","books_count":2,"tsearch_vector":"'aristophanes' 'comedies' 'comics' 'in' 'of' 'the'","created_at":"2017-04-13T02:31:12.923+03:00","updated_at":"2017-04-13T02:31:12.923+03:00"},"pages":55,"publication_year":2012,"publication_place":"Αθήνα","price":"3.0","price_updated_at":"2012-10-24","cover_type":null,"availability":"Κυκλοφορεί","format":"Βιβλίο","original_language":null,"original_title":"Θεσμοφοριάζουσες","publisher_id":323,"extra":null,"biblionet_id":183619,"url":"https://v2.bibliography.gr/books/ladies-day.json"}]