Comedias, tomo 1 de 3 : Los Acarnienses, los Caballeros, las Nubes by Aristophanes

(13 User reviews)   5129
By Donald Scott Posted on Dec 22, 2025
In Category - Wit & Irony
Aristophanes, 447? BCE-386? BCE Aristophanes, 447? BCE-386? BCE
Spanish
Ever think politics is a circus? Aristophanes thought so too—in 425 BC. Forget stuffy history lessons. This collection is like the wildest, most unhinged political satire you've ever seen, just with more togas and less Twitter. In 'The Acharnians,' one fed-up Athenian makes a private peace treaty to escape the Peloponnesian War chaos. 'The Knights' is a brutal, hilarious roast of a populist demagogue, using slapstick and sausages as weapons. And 'The Clouds'? It's a takedown of intellectual fads, where Socrates runs a 'Thinketeria' that teaches you how to argue your way out of debt. It's shockingly modern, deeply silly, and proof that people have been laughing at the powerful for over 2,400 years.
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The Story

This first volume collects three of Aristophanes' early comedies, all written during the long, grinding Peloponnesian War. In The Acharnians, a farmer named Dicaeopolis is so sick of the war's nonsense that he brokers his own personal peace treaty with Sparta, leading to a life of luxury while his neighbors suffer. The Knights is a no-holds-barred attack on the politician Cleon, portrayed as a corrupt slave who must be out-swindled by an even slimier sausage-seller. The Clouds follows a debt-ridden father who sends his son to Socrates' 'Thinkery,' a school that promises to teach you how to win any argument—with disastrous and funny consequences for traditional values.

Why You Should Read It

Reading this feels like discovering a secret. You expect ancient plays to be distant and formal, but Aristophanes is in your face. His humor is physical, absurd, and incredibly brave—he named names and mocked the most powerful people in Athens. The jokes about war profiteering, slick politicians, and pretentious intellectuals land with a punch you can feel today. It's not just history; it's a masterclass in using comedy as a weapon and a release valve for a society under immense stress. You'll be stunned by how little the targets of satire have changed.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves political satire like Veep or Dr. Strangelove, and for readers curious about ancient Greece beyond the philosophers and battles. You don't need a classics degree—you just need a sense of humor about power, war, and human folly. A great translation makes all the difference, turning ancient jokes into genuine laughs. This is the chaotic, brilliant, and deeply human counterpoint to all those solemn statues.



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William Harris
1 year ago

Good quality content.

Dorothy Brown
6 months ago

Amazing book.

Kimberly Davis
5 months ago

Fast paced, good book.

Donna Walker
1 year ago

Simply put, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. I couldn't put it down.

William Clark
6 months ago

As someone who reads a lot, it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. A true masterpiece.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (13 User reviews )

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