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This multiauthored volume, as well as bringing into clearer focus
the notion of drama and oratory as important media of public
inquiry and critique, aims to generate significant attention to the
unified intentions of the dramatist and the orator to establish
favourable conditions of internal stability in democratic Athens.
We hope that readers both enjoy and find valuable their engagement
with these ideas and beliefs regarding the indissoluble bond
between oratorical expertise and dramatic artistry. This exciting
collection of studies by worldwide acclaimed classicists and acute
younger Hellenists is envisaged as part of the general effort,
almost unanimously acknowledged as valid and productive, to explore
the impact of formalized speech in particular and craftsmanship
rhetoric in general upon Attic drama as a moral and educational
force in the Athenian city-state. Both poet and orator seek to
deepen the central tensions of their work and to enlarge the main
themes of their texts to even broader terms by investing in the art
of rhetoric, whilst at the same time, through a skillful handling
of events, evaluating the past and establishing standards or
ideology.
This volume is an accessible yet in-depth narratological study of
Euripides' Alcestis - the earliest extant play of Euripides and one
of the most experimental masterpieces of Greek tragedy, not only
standing in place of a satyr-play but also preserving at least some
of its typical features. Commencing from the widely-held view, so
lamentably ignored within the domain of Classics, that a
narratology of drama should be predicated upon the notion of
narrative as verbal, as well as visual, rendition of a story, this
unique volume contextualizes the play in terms of its reception by
the original audience, locating the intricate narrative tropes of
the plot in the dynamics of fifth-century Athenian mythology and
religion.
The fact that aspects of witnesses and evidence put them in the
centre of the institutional and cultural (e.g. religious, literary)
construction of ancient societies indicates that it is important to
keep offering nuanced approaches to the topic of this volume. To
advance knowledge of the processes of presenting witnesses and
gathering, or constructing, evidence is, in fact, to better and
more fully understand the ways in which deliberative Athenian
democracy functions, what the core elements of political life and
civic identity are, and how they relate to the system of using
logos to make decisions. For, witnesses and evidence were important
prerequisites of getting the Athenian citizenship and exerting the
civic/political identity as a member of the community. It is
important, therefore, all the matters that relate to
information-gathering and decision-making to be examined anew.
Emphasis can be placed on a variety of genres to allow scholars
recreate the fullest and clearest possible image about the
witnessing and evidencing in antiquity. Chapters in this volume
include considerations of social, political, literary, and moral
theory, alongside studies of the impact of information-gathering
and decision-making in oratory and drama, with a steady focus on
the application of key ideas and values in social and political
justice to issues of pressing ethical concern.
This volume explores the relationships between masterworks of
Sophocles, Euripides and Aristophanes and critical events of
Athenian history, by bringing together internationally
distinguished scholars with expertise on different aspects of
ancient theatre. These specialists study how tragic and comic plays
composed in late fifth century BCE mirror the acute political and
social crisis unfolding in Athens in the wake of the military
catastrophe in 413 BCE and the oligarchic revolution in 411 BCE.
With events of such magnitude the late fifth century held the
potential for vast and fast cultural and intellectual change. In
times of severe emergency humans gain a more conscious
understanding of their historically shaped presence; this
realization often has a welcome effect of offering new perspectives
to tackle future challenges. Over twenty academic experts believe
that the Attic theatre showed increased responsiveness to the
pressing social and political issues of the day to the benefit of
the polis. By regularly promoting examples of public-spirited and
capable figures of authority, Greek drama provided the people of
Athens with a civic understanding of their own good.
In the wake of recent advances in the treatment of longstanding
problems pertaining to the interpretation of Homeric poetry, this
volume brings together cutting-edge research from a cohort of
acclaimed scholars on Homer and the Homeric Hymns. The variety of
topics covered spans the entire field of Homeric philology: the
methods and solutions provided for a new edition of the Odyssey,
the puzzle of the relation between the festival of the Panathenaea
and the Homeric text, the disclosure of the meaning of notorious
cruces pertaining to arcane formulas, the two emblematic heroes of
the Iliad and the Odyssey, Achilles and Odysseus, Homeric poetics,
the range and use of repetition in a traditional medium, the
composition of the Homeric epics, the Apologoi and 'Cyclic'
Narrative, as well as the Homeric Hymns to Hermes and Aphrodite.
This book aims to offer a contemporary literary interpretation of
the play, including a readable discussion of its underlying
historical, religious, moral, social, and mythical issues. Also, it
discusses the most recent interpretative scholarship on the play,
the main intertextual affiliations with earlier Thebes-related
tragedies, especially focusing on Sophocles' Antigone and Oedipus
Tyrannus, and the literature and performance reception of the play;
it contains an up-to-date bibliography and detailed indices.
Thebook won the Academy of Athens Great Award for the Best
Monograph in Classical Philology for 2008.
This collection of essays, published in honour of Professor Georgia
Xanthakis-Karamanos, addresses topics which lie at the forefront of
current research on the fields of Greek drama and classical
reception studies. It brings together internationally distinguished
scholars who provide fresh insights into issues pertaining to the
origins of Greek tragedy and comedy, their generic identity, the
structure, the morality or the divine and human characters emerging
from individual plays, the presence of Greek drama outside Athens
in post-classical times, the associations between drama and genres
such as epic and oratory or even the reception of Greek drama in
operatic works such as Wagner's Tristan und Isolde. Related art
forms, such as music, receive particular attention. Focusing on
either broader topics or specific texts, the essays of this volume
provide a wide range of theoretical perspectives often combining
modern critical trends such as reception studies, narratology or
cultural studies with close and acute readings of individual
passages. The volume is of particular interest to scholars and
students of Greek drama and its reception as well as to anyone
interested in Greek culture and its various manifestations.
This study of Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus demonstrates the
applicability of narrative models to drama. It presents a major
contribution not only to Sophoclean criticism but to dramatic
criticism as a whole. For the first time, the methods of
contemporary narrative theory are thoroughly applied to the text of
a single major play. Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus is presented as
a uniquely rich text, which deftly uses the figure and history of
the blind Oedipus to explore and thematize some of the basic
narratological concerns of Greek tragedy: the relation between the
narrow here-and-now of visible stage action and the many off-stage
worlds that have to be mediated into it through narrative,
including the past, the future, other dramatizations of the myth,
and the world of the fifth-century audience.
In the wake of recent advances in the treatment of longstanding
problems pertaining to the interpretation of Homeric poetry, this
volume brings together cutting-edge research from a cohort of
acclaimed scholars on Homer and the Homeric Hymns. The variety of
topics covered spans the entire field of Homeric philology: the
methods and solutions provided for a new edition of the Odyssey,
the puzzle of the relation between the festival of the Panathenaea
and the Homeric text, the disclosure of the meaning of notorious
cruces pertaining to arcane formulas, the two emblematic heroes of
the Iliad and the Odyssey, Achilles and Odysseus, Homeric poetics,
the range and use of repetition in a traditional medium, the
composition of the Homeric epics, the Apologoi and 'Cyclic'
Narrative, as well as the Homeric Hymns to Hermes and Aphrodite.
This multiauthored volume, as well as bringing into clearer focus
the notion of drama and oratory as important media of public
inquiry and critique, aims to generate significant attention to the
unified intentions of the dramatist and the orator to establish
favourable conditions of internal stability in democratic Athens.
We hope that readers both enjoy and find valuable their engagement
with these ideas and beliefs regarding the indissoluble bond
between oratorical expertise and dramatic artistry. This exciting
collection of studies by worldwide acclaimed classicists and acute
younger Hellenists is envisaged as part of the general effort,
almost unanimously acknowledged as valid and productive, to explore
the impact of formalized speech in particular and craftsmanship
rhetoric in general upon Attic drama as a moral and educational
force in the Athenian city-state. Both poet and orator seek to
deepen the central tensions of their work and to enlarge the main
themes of their texts to even broader terms by investing in the art
of rhetoric, whilst at the same time, through a skillful handling
of events, evaluating the past and establishing standards or
ideology.
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