Electra (, ÃÂlektra, also called The Electra), is a Greek tragedy by Sophocles. The original publication date is not known, but various stylistic similarities with the Philoctetes (409 BC) and the Oedipus at Colonus (406 BC) leads scholars to believe it was written towards the end of Sophocles' career. Richard Claverhouse Jebb dates it between 420 BC and 414 BC.
During the Trojan War, King Agamemnon of Mycenae sacrifices his oldest daughter Iphigenia to the goddess Artemis in order to ensure favorable weather and winds when sailing for Troy after offending the goddess. When King Agamemnon returns from the Trojan War, his wife Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus (Agamemnon's cousin) kill him. Clytemnestra believes the murder was justified since Agamemnon had sacrificed their daughter. Electra, a younger daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, rescued her younger brother Orestes from her mother by sending him to Strophius of Phocis.
The following summary is based off the translation by H.D.F. Kitto.
Set in the city of Mycenae a few years after the Trojan War, the play tells the story of Electra and her brother Orestes, who are haunted by the murder of their father Agamemnon by their mother Clytemnestra and their stepfather Aegisthus. The play begins years later when Orestes has returned as a grown man with a plot for revenge, as well as to claim the throne.
Orestes arrives with his friend Pylades, son of Strophius, and a pedagogue, i.e. tutor. The tutor is an old attendant of Orestes, who took him from Mycenae to Strophius after the death of his father. Electra told him to take Orestes because he remained loyal to Agamemnon They discuss a plan to get revenge for the death of Orestes father. They plan to have the tutor announce that Orestes has died in a chariot race and that two men (really Orestes and Pylades) are arriving shortly to deliver an urn with his remains. Meanwhile, Electra continues to publicly mourn the death of her father Agamemnon, holding her mother Clytemnestra responsible for his murder. During the time since she helped him escape, Electra has waited for Orestes to return to Mycenae.
Electra's sister, Chrysothemis, enters and chides Electra for still holding resentment for their father's death for so long, saying they have no power to change what has happened. Electra becomes angry at the idea that Chrysothemis is defending those who killed their father and favoring their mother. Chrysothemis then tells Electra that as soon as their step-father returns from his visit to the countryside, if she continues to lament Agamemnon's death, she'll be imprisoned for life. Chrysothemis goes to leave to lay tributes on their father's grave, which she was ordered to do by Clytemnestra after she had a dream of Agamemnon haunting her. Electra convinces her to not do that on her mother's behalf, since to her their mother detested their father so greatly.
Clytemnestra enters and begins trying to make Electra understand her reasoning for killing Agamemnon. She tells her of his betrayal to the goddess Artemis, and that if he had killed Iphigenia for any other reason he would have had to pay. Electra argues that whether justly or not, she killed him, which Electra cannot forgive her for. Immediately after, the tutor enters and informs Clytemnestra and Electra of Orestes "death". When Electra is told of the death of Orestes her grief becomes worse. Clytemnestra becomes more calm at the news and leaves. Chrysothemis enters and tells Electra to be happy again because she saw Orestes laying tributes on their father's tomb, which Electra doesn't believe. She tells Chrysothemis of Orestes death. Chrysothemis leaves and Electra laments.
Orestes arrives carrying the urn supposedly containing his ashes. He does not recognize Electra, nor does she recognize him. He gives her the urn and she delivers a moving lament over it, unaware that her brother is, in fact, standing alive next to her. He learns of Electra's anger of the death of their father, and over the death of Orestes, and she demands to take the urn containing his ashes. Orestes declines and reveals his identity to his sister. She is overjoyed that he is alive, but in their excitement, they nearly reveal his identity out loud, and the tutor comes out from the palace to urge them on. Electra joins her brother's plot. She stays back and watches out for Aegisthus to return. Orestes and Pylades enter the house and slay Clytemnestra. As Aegisthus returns home, Electra keeps him briefly occupied talking about the messengers who brought the news of Orestes death and leading Aegisthus to Clytemnestra's room. There, Orestes and Pylades put Clytemnestra's corpse under a sheet and then present it to Aegisthus as the body of Orestes. He lifts the veil to discover who it really is, and Orestes then reveals himself. They escort Aegisthus offstage to be killed at the hearth, the same location where Agamemnon was slain. The play ends before the death of Aegisthus is announced, with the chorus telling the siblings they were successful in their mission and restored respect to their father's name.
Speaking roles:
Non-speaking roles:
The story of Orestes' revenge was a popular subject in Greek tragedies.
Roman writer Cicero considered Electra to be a masterpiece, and the work is also viewed favorably among modern critics and scholars.
Many modern scholars consider the dichotomy between the two main characters. They draw attention to this common trope in Sophocles' writing; putting two characters who are completely different in a scene at the same time in order to dramatize the difference between them.
In The Reader's Encyclopedia of World Drama, John Gassner and Edward Quinn argued that its "simple device of delaying the recognition between brother and sister produces a series of brilliant scenes which display Electra's heroic resolution under constant attack." Of the titular character, Edith Hall also wrote, "Sophocles certainly found an effective dramatic vehicle in this remarkable figure, driven by deprivation and cruelty into near-psychotic extremes of behavior; no other character in his extant dramas dominates the stage to such an extent." L.A. Post noted that the play was "unique among Greek tragedies for its emphasis on action." For John Woodard, the parallel in order to dramatize reactions is drawn between multiple of the characters, not just Electra and Orestes.