This book brings together nineteen studies by Alan Sommerstein on ancient Athenian drama, especially tragedy; five of these have not previously appeared in print, and almost all the others were first published (between 1992 and 2(106) in out-of-the-way journals, collections, or conference volumes. These appear here as originally written, but arc accompanied by updating addenda. Though they cover a wide range of topicsβrom the presentation of violence in drama to the socialization of the adolescent male, from the authenticity of play titles to the significance of one character calling another 'dearestᵭost of them focus on four or five themes: the dramatists' exploitation and modification of myth; how much their audiences could know or guess in advance about the content of a play; connected suites of plays that were produced together (trilogies and tetralogies); the information that can be gleaned from our fragmentary evidence about plays that have not survived; and some of the multifarious connections between Athenian tragic drama and Athenian society, including the socioeconomic composition of audiences, the relationship between Aeschylus' Oresicia and the politics of its day, and evidence supporting the tradition that Aeschylus desired to he commemorated on his tomb not as a poet but as a soldier. All arc informed by the conviction that 'the study of ancient, or any other, literature is a branch of history'. --Book Jacket.
Book Details
- Country: US
- Published: 2010-05-13
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Language: English
- Pages: 342
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