Facing Down the Furies, Edith Hall
Facing Down the Furies, Edith Hall
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Facing Down the Furies
Suicide, the Ancient Greeks, and Me

Author: Edith Hall

Narrator: Edith Hall

Unabridged: 7 hr 25 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/19/2024


Synopsis

An award-winning classicist turns to Greek tragedies for the wisdom to understand the damage caused by suicide and help those who are contemplating suicide themselves
In Sophocles’ tragedy Oedipus the Tyrant, a messenger arrives to report that Jocasta, queen of Thebes, has killed herself. To prepare listeners for this terrible news, he announces, “The tragedies that hurt the most are those that sufferers have chosen for themselves.” Edith Hall, whose own life and psyche have been shaped by such loss—her mother’s grandfather, mother, and first cousin all took their own lives—traces the philosophical arguments on suicide, from Plato and Aristotle to David Hume and Albert Camus.
In this deeply personal story, Hall explores the psychological damage that suicide inflicts across generations, relating it to the ancient Greek idea of a family curse. She draws parallels between characters from Greek tragedy and her own relatives, including her great-grandfather, whose life and death bore similar motivations to Sophocles’ Ajax: both men were overwhelmed by shame and humiliation.
Hall, haunted by her own periodic suicidal urges, shows how plays by Sophocles and other Greek dramatists helped her work through the loss of her grandmother and namesake Edith and understand her relationship with her own mother. The wisdom and solace found in the ancient tragedies, she argues, can help one choose survival over painful adversity and offer comfort to those who are tragically bereaved.
Edith Hall is a professor in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at Durham University. She is the author of more than thirty books, including Aristotle’s Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life. She lives in Cambridgeshire, UK.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Riley on September 08, 2024

Difficult but important read......more

Goodreads review by Chloe on March 18, 2025

This combination of both personal family memoir and academic exploration of Greek tragedies is a deeply emotional and heavy read, but an important one for both the depressed and those not. Edith navigates her “family curse” in which three of her family members, in relatively quick succession, killed......more

Goodreads review by Megan on April 13, 2024

Part memoir, part academic paper in Facing Down the Furies, Edith Hall delves into the historical association, generational impact and actions associated with the actions and thoughts of suicide; a concept that has gripped humankind for hundreds of years that (for some reason) divides people on whet......more

Goodreads review by Tara ☆ Tarasbookshelf on December 26, 2023

Excellent. Absolutely necessary. Required reading. A book about suicide through an academic lens examining the Greek tragedies, and heavily led and influenced by the author's own life and experience. Wonderfully written and sensitivity handled with a complete lack of stigma and a spacious non-judgeme......more

Goodreads review by Logan on February 08, 2024

"Against Suicide" ought to be the subtitle, in the form of an Athenian orator's prosecution speech. The scholarly side of the work discusses instances of suicide, along with trauma and depression, as portrayed in Ancient Greek drama. It is not scholarship, in it being the author's interpretations an......more