Spelling suggestions: "subject:"green drama"" "subject:"great drama""
81 |
Pompai : processions in Athenian tragedyKavoulaki, Athena January 1996 (has links)
This thesis investigates the significance of ritual movements in theatre and society of fifth-century Athens. The focus falls on processional movement, the definitive characteristics of which are drawn from the ancient Greek concept of pompe, i.e. a movement towards a defined destination, involving the conveyance of a ritual symbol (or an object or a person) between specific points of departure and arrival. The social contexts of divine and heroic cult, funerals and weddings prove to be the main occasions for the performance of such processional movements. In the world outside the theatre, processions are shown to be crucial in defining transitions, shaping social relations, and manifesting the action and inviting the attention of the divine. The socio-religious significance of processions is fully appropriated and explored by tragedy. Processional action, recurrently evoked in the tragic plays, proves to be crucial for the articulation of the tragic δρώμενα. This is argued in the collection and analysis of a number of scenes from extant fifth-century tragedy in which processional resonances permeate the action. The interpretation of the scenes in the light of the ritual background which shapes them considerably enhances the understanding and appreciation of the plays as theatrical experience - experience which explores the potential of spatial configurations and visual symbolism, in a context of symbolic communication which is largely defined by participation in the rituals of the community. The thesis argues that the importance of processions in the theatre is inextricably connected with their power - as manifested in the ritual life of the polis - to gather the community and to initiate the process of θεάσασθαι, implicating both active participants and θεαταί in the performed action. Greek tragic theatre builds upon this basic function of processions and activates their power. Thus it also combines their potential to define transitions with the significance of tragic μετάβασις; and with the importance of demarcation of space and transformation of time in the theatre. Ritual experience is activated, reshaped and enlarged, enabling the re-creation and transformation of the experience of the audience. Processions can illuminate the nature of tragedy itself.
|
82 |
Classical tragedy in the age of Macedon : studies in the theatrical discourses of AthensHanink, Johanna Marie January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
|
83 |
Menander and the expectations of his audienceCiesko, Martin January 2004 (has links)
Fiktion der Handlung? This highly conventional genre can, I claim, through both embracing and problematising its very conventionality express itself with irony and subtlety that is at least as effective as open self-praise by poets in comic genres that allow it.
|
84 |
The Euripidean priestess : women with religious authority in the plays of EuripidesBlack, Elaine January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
|
85 |
Novae comoediae fragmenta in papyris reperta exceptis Menandreis ...Schröder, Otto Johannes-Jacobus, January 1915 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Kiel. / Vita. "Die arbeit erscheint, vermehrt durch einen Index verborum, gleichneitig als heft 135 der Kleinen texte für vorlesungen und übungen (herausgegeben von Hans Lietzmann)."
|
86 |
La femme esclave dans la tragédie grecque féminin et dépendance dans l'imagination poétique /Georgopoulou-Goulette, Stavroula. Casevitz, Michel. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Université Paris X-Nanterre, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references.
|
87 |
The motivation of exits in Greek and Latin comedy ...Bennett, Kathryn Seymour, January 1932 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Michigan, 1932. / Bibliography: p. [95]-96.
|
88 |
The foreigner in Hellenistic comedy ...Coon, Raymond Huntington. January 1920 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, 1916. / "Private edition, distributed by the University of Chicago libraries." Includes bibliographical references.
|
89 |
The use of myths to create suspense in extant Greek tragedy ...Flint, William Willard, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Princeton University, 1921.
|
90 |
Dionysos in the satyr-dramaGoodrich, Grace G. January 1900 (has links)
Presented as Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1913. / Reprinted from University of Wisconsin studies in language and literature, no. 15. Includes bibliographical references.
|
Page generated in 0.0364 seconds