Athenian comedy in the Roman Empire /
"Athenian comedy is firmly entrenched in the classical canon, but imperial authors debated, dissected and redirected comic texts, plots and language of Aristophanes, Menander, and their rivals in ways that reflect the non-Athenocentric, pan-Mediterranean performance culture of the imperial era....
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London, UK :
Bloomsbury Academic,
2016.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- 1. Ignorance and the reception of comedy in antiquity / Tom Hawkins and C.W. Marshall
- 2. Juvenal and the revival of Greek new comedy at Rome / Mathias Hanses
- 3. Parrhēsia and Pudenda: speaking genitals and satiric speech / Julia Nelson Hawkins
- 4. Dio Chrysostom and the Naked Parabasis / Tom Hawkings
- 5. Favorinus and the comic adultery plot / Ryan B. Samuels
- 6. Comedies and comic actors in the Greek East: an epigraphical perspective / Fritz Graf
- 7. Plutarch, epitomes, and Athenian comedy / C.W. Marshall
- 8. Lucian's Aristophanes: on understanding old comedy in the Roman Imperial Period / Ralph M. Rosen
- 9. Exposing frauds: Lucian and comedy / Ian C. Storey
- 10. Revoking comic license: Aristides' Or. 29 and the performance of comedy / Anna Peterson
- 11. Aelian and comedy: four studies / C.W. Marshall
- 12. The Menandrian world of Alciphron's Letters / Melissa Funke
- 13. Two clouded marriages: Aristainetos' allusions to Aristophanes' Clouds in Letters 2.3 and 2.12 / Emilia A. Barbiero.