The Songs of Aristophanes
Title | The Songs of Aristophanes PDF eBook |
Author | L. P. E. Parker |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 618 |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 9780198149446 |
A comedy of Aristophanes was in large measure a musical performance, and his lyric verse covers a wide range of styles - from popular song to parody of tragedy. The music is lost, and our only way of recovering something of the experience of an Athenian audience is by studying the rhythms of the poetry. This book provides a full text, with scansions, of the lyric of the surviving plays, and an introduction to the different rhythms used by Aristophanes, their origins, and literary associations. Dr Parker pays particular attention to the role played by lyric metre in the structure of the plays and to distinguishing the different levels of metrical style, thus illustrating the integral part metre plays in Aristophanes' dramatic art and satire. She also discusses fully the metrical aspects of textual problems in Aristophanes' lyric, and a section of the introduction traces the evolution of the study of Aristophanes' metres and the influence this has had on the text.
Aristophanes
Title | Aristophanes PDF eBook |
Author | James Robson |
Publisher | A&C Black |
Pages | 257 |
Release | 2013-10-16 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 1472519620 |
This accessible introduction to the work of one of the world's greatest comic writers tackles key questions posed by Aristophanes' plays, such as staging, humour, songs, obscene language, politics and the modern translation and performance of Aristophanic comedy. The book opens up exciting and contentious areas of Aristophanic scholarship in a way that is engaging and readily comprehensible to a non-specialist audience, never losing sight of the fact that Aristophanes' plays are vibrant literary texts, designed primarily to appeal to a classical Athenian audience as pieces of living drama. Key to the book's appeal is that James Robson conceives of the plays as dynamic texts, containing a treasure trove of information not only about how they might have been performed and received in classical Athens, but also how they might be read and understood today. Most importantly, readers are given the tools and information to make their own minds up about the debates that still rage about Aristophanic comedy in the modern world.
Lysistrata
Title | Lysistrata PDF eBook |
Author | Aristophanes |
Publisher | |
Pages | 64 |
Release | 1916 |
Genre | Lysistrata (Fictitious character) |
ISBN |
Frogs and Other Plays
Title | Frogs and Other Plays PDF eBook |
Author | Aristophanes |
Publisher | Penguin UK |
Pages | 337 |
Release | 2007-03-01 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 0141935774 |
The master of ancient Greek comic drama, Aristophanes combined slapstick, humour and cheerful vulgarity with acute political observations. In The Frogs, written during the Peloponnesian War, Dionysus descends to the Underworld to bring back a poet who can help Athens in its darkest hour, and stages a great debate to help him decide between the traditional wisdom of Aeschylus and the brilliant modernity of Euripides. The clash of generations and values is also the object of Aristophanes’ satire in The Wasps, in which an old-fashioned father and his loose-living son come to blows and end up in court. And in The Poet and the Women, Euripides, accused of misogyny, persuades a relative to infiltrate an all-women festival to find out whether revenge is being plotted against him.
Philosophy, Poetry, and Power in Aristophanes's Birds
Title | Philosophy, Poetry, and Power in Aristophanes's Birds PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Holmes |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield |
Pages | 247 |
Release | 2018-11-23 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 1498590772 |
Aristophanes was clearly anxious about the role of the sophists and the “new” education in Athens. After the perceived failure of Clouds in 423 and its subsequent, unperformed revision, Aristophanes, this book argues, returned in 414 with Birds, a continuation and deepening of his critique found in Clouds. Peisetaerus or “persuader of his comrades,” the protagonist of Birds, though an old man, is clearly a student of Socrates’ phrontisterion. Unlike Socrates, however, he is political and ambitious and he understands the whole of human nature, both rational and irrational. Peisetaerus employs the various deconstructive techniques of Socrates and his allies (which is summed up on the comic sage in the image of “father-beating”) to overturn not just human society, but, with the help of his new allies, the divine and musical birds, the cosmos. After his new gods and bird city, Cloudcuckooland, are actually established, however, the hero re-introduces the “old” ways - justice, moderation, and obedience to law – but now under his personal authority, and thereby becomes “the highest of the gods.” Thus, the author postulates, in 414 Aristophanes has come to acknowledge the potency of the apparent civic-minded turn (or element) of the sophists, while aware of the self-aggrandizing nature of their ambition. Peisetaerus, unlike Socrates, is successful: he is establishing a just polis and cosmos and, therefore, must be victorious. But the consequence or cost of this success is illustrated through the Bird Chorus. After the polis is founded, the birds never again sing of their musical reciprocity with the Muses, the source of melodies for men. The birds are now political and the policemen of human beings. The sophist-run cosmos has lost its music. The new Zeus is an ugly bird-mutant. The gods and all nomoi have lost their beauty, honor, and reverential nature. Birds, in its finale, hilariously, but boldlyilluminates the inherent tension between philosophy (reason) and poetry (divinely-inspired tradition).
The Cup of Song
Title | The Cup of Song PDF eBook |
Author | Vanessa Cazzato |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 364 |
Release | 2016 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0199687684 |
The Cup of Song explores the symbiotic relationship of the symposion and poetry across Greek literary history. Each chapter discusses one aspect of sympotic engagement by key authors across the major genres of Greek poetry, leading to a characterization of the full spectrum of sympotic poetry from its beginnings through to the Hellenistic age.
Aristophanes' Clouds
Title | Aristophanes' Clouds PDF eBook |
Author | S. Douglas Olson |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2021 |
Genre | Greek drama (Comedy) |
ISBN | 9780472054770 |
A new text and commentary on one of Aristophanes' greatest and most influential plays.