Aristophanes was the most celebrated comic playwright in fifth century BCE Athens. Aaron Poochigian earned a Ph.D. in Classics from the University of Minnesota and an MFA in Poetry from Columbia University. He is the translator of, among other classical works, Sappho's poetry (published under the title Stung with Love), Apollonius's Jason and the Argonauts, and four plays by Aristophanes: Lysistrata, Clouds, Birds, and Women of the Assembly. He has published two books of poetry-The Cosmic Purr and Manhattanite-and a novel-in-verse, Mr. Either/Or. His poems have appeared in such publications as Best American Poetry, The Paris Review, and POETRY.
"""Aristophanes was a funny, often obscene, social commentator, and he was also a brilliantly fluent, wide-ranging poet, whose lyric rhythms were recited and sung to music, with dancing. It’s very rare for modern translators to convey his poetic virtuosity or make any attempt to bring his meters to life. But Aaron Poochigan has achieved this feat, crafting polymetric translations that convey the whole range of Aristophanes’s larger-than-life characters and provocative, alternative reality scenarios. This new Aristophanes is zany, sharp, inventive, vivacious, and surprisingly relevant for our times."" -- Emily Wilson, translator of Homer’s Odyssey ""Poochigian has reanimated this quartet of Greek dramas with an approach that conveys all the comic energies, political urgencies, and philosophical concerns of the original plays. Alive and alert to the evolutions and mutations of contemporary language but tuned to the pitch and rhythms of ancient literature, these energetic and adroit twenty-first century translations are both effortlessly readable and genuinely theatrical—as lively on the page as they will be on any stage."" -- Simon Armitage, Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom ""Luckily for us, Aaron Poochigian has re-animated Aristophanes, in glittering translations of four of his most 21st-century-appropriate plays. It will be interesting to see whether directors bring these versions to life."" -- Willard Spiegelman - The Wall Street Journal"