Suchergebnisse
Filter
Format
Medientyp
Sprache
Weitere Sprachen
Jahre
36487 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Aristophanes the democrat: the politics of satirical comedy during the Peloponnesian War
Getting to grips with the politics of old comedy -- Metacomedy and politics -- Metacomedy and caricature -- Acharnians -- Metacomedy, caricature, and politics from Knights to Peace -- Metacomedy, caricature, and politics from Autolycus to Frogs
Fiji's Political Drama: Tragedy or Comedy
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
Fiji's political landscape is in chaos, with a fragile coalition on the brink of collapse and the opposition falling apart amid scandals and power struggles. The potential outcomes include the government falling, the prime minister being ousted, or new elections being called, each scenario threatening further instability.
Comedy and politics: Machiavelli's magical contemporary drama
In: Journal of language and politics, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 270-286
ISSN: 1569-9862
This article analyzes the relationship between two of Machiavelli's political textsThe Prince(1513) and theDiscourses on Livy(1512–1517), and his popular comedyThe Mandrake Root(La Mandragola) (1515). Through an examination of these works, I will show what influence his political ideas may have had on his comedy and, conversely, how key points in his comedy emerge as central ideas in his political texts. By demonstrating how his texts communicate with each other, I will show how he recycles established concepts and even changes their meaning.
Future freedoms: intergenerational justice, democratic theory, and ancient Greek tragedy & comedy
"What do present generations owe the future? In Future Freedoms, Elizabeth Markovits asks readers to consider the fact that while democracy holds out the promise of freedom and autonomy, citizens are always bound by the decisions made by previous generations. Motivated by the contemporary political and theoretical landscape, Markovits examines the relationship between democratic citizenship and time by engaging ancient Greek tragedy and comedy. She reveals the ways in which democratic thought in the West has often hinged on ignoring intergenerational relationships and the obligations they create in favor of an emphasis on freedom as sovereignty. She claims that democratic citizens must develop a set of self-directed practices that better acknowledge citizens' connections across time, cultivating a particular orientation toward themselves as part of much larger transgenerational assemblages. As celebrations and critiques of Athenian political identity, the ancient plays at the core of Future Freedoms remind readers that intergenerational questions strike at the heart of the democratic sensibility. This invaluable book will be of interest to students, researchers, and scholars of political theory, the history of political thought, classics, and social and political philosophy. "--Provided by publisher.
Tragedy and Comedy in Greek Participatory Communities
In: A Companion to Greek Democracy and the Roman Republic, S. 429-445
Greek Drama and Political Thought
In: A Companion to Greek and Roman Political Thought, S. 440-455
Television's portrayals of minorities and women in drama and comedy drama 1971‐80
In: Journal of broadcasting: publ. quarterly, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 277-288
ISSN: 2331-415X
Agrarian Pasts, Utopian Futures : : Food, Nostalgia, and the Power of Dreaming in Old Comedy and the New Southern Food Movement
This dissertation attempts to answer one very large question: in what political ways do the aesthetics of food function? Throughout this dissertation, I articulate moments in food culture when nostalgia (looking backwards to foods of the past) in fact becomes an idealized model for a utopian future. This conflation of looking backward (nostalgia) and looking forward (utopianism) demonstrates the ways in which time is multiple and multi-directional. In my current work, I address the relationship between nostalgia and utopian thinking in two case studies: the ancient Greek comedies of Aristophanes and cookbooks from the contemporary American South. In these two examples, nostalgia for food is entangled with utopian rhetoric, and moving back towards an agricultural, pre-democratic government is figured as a utopian turn. This nostalgia often operates as a revisionist history that erases slave labor and scarcity. However, what I call "the utopian turn" also offers both new dramatic possibilities for characters on the Greek comic stage and a more inclusive definition of the South for contemporary chefs and cookbook authors. I argue that in these case studies, one might recoup a kernel of utopian thinking from an otherwise conservative, nostalgic turn to an agricultural past. The first half of the dissertation outlines the utopias presented in Aristophanes' comedies, which paradoxically both look back nostalgically to a pre- democratic, agrarian society and represent that society as full of urban, imported luxury foods. In the second half of the dissertation, using a horizontal approach across popular media, I examine representations of the South from the New Southern Food Movement in which the South's agrarian past is figured as free from labor, in which southern food is figured as gourmet, luxury food. Ultimately, I conclude that food in performance becomes unstuck in time (moving back to an imagined nostalgic past or forwards towards an imagined utopian future) in order to critique contemporary political crises and create aesthetic solutions that point towards a better future
BASE
Show Business: Deixis in Fifth-Century Athenian Drama
In my dissertation I examine the use of deixis in fifth-century Athenian drama to show how a playwright's lexical choices shape an audience's engagement with and investment in a dramatic work. The study combines modern performance theories concerning the relationship between actor and audience with a detailed examination of the demonstratives hode and houtos in a representative sample of tragedy (and satyr play) and in the full Aristophanic corpus, and reaches conclusions that aid and expand our understanding of both tragedy and comedy. In addition to exploring and interpreting a number of particular scenes for their inter-actor dynamics and staging, I argue overall that tragedy's predilection for hode , a word which by definition conveys a strong spatio-temporal presence ("this here / now"), pointedly draws the spectators into the dramatic fiction. The comic poet's preference for houtos ("that just mentioned" / "that there"), on the other hand, coupled with his tendency to directly acknowledge the audience individually and in the aggregate, disengages the spectators from the immediacy of the tragic tetralogies and reengages them with the normal, everyday world to which they will return at the close of the festival.I begin Chapter 1 with an overview of previous scholarship on the subject of deixis, from the ancient grammarian Apollonius Dyscolus' study on the syntax of pronouns, to the German psychologist Karl Bühler's seminal book Sprachtheorie (1934), which posits that all deictic expressions refer to a field of reference at whose center (the Origo ) are the words "here," "now," and "I," to more recent work on the subject both in the fields of modern socio-linguistics and performance studies. To establish the differences and similarities in linguistic (and performative) usage between playwrights and genres I distinguish between eight types of deixis: first person, second person, spatial, person / object, anaphora, cataphora, situational, and temporal. The four most common types (spatial, person / object, anaphora, cataphora) are discussed in Chapters 2-4.In Chapter 2, I examine the language of spatial reference in terms of "macro space," the larger spatial setting of a drama (city, region, country), and "micro space," whatever the stage building is declared to represent. While tragedy and satyr play frequently refer to the imagined location of the dramatic action, and thus seek to create a space which includes the audience, in comedy not only are demonstratives seldom employed to acknowledge where the characters are, but when they are used they usually serve to unify the dramatic space and time with the larger civic space of real-life Athens. In addition to these larger generic issues, I examine the phrase "this house" over the course of Aeschylus' Oresteia , showing that the intense focus on the skene as the epicenter of murder in Agamemnon and Choephori necessarily disappears in Eumenides, for it is only by functionally removing the House (and Apollo's temple), deemphasizing it as an important, meaningful space, and replacing it with a larger, civic space (Athens) and institution (the Areopagite council) that discord can be resolved without further violence and competing social interests can be effectively reintegrated and harmonized. I study "person deixis" and "object deixis" in Chapter 3. In drama, the proximal demonstrative hode is used almost by default to refer to people and to objects. When houtos is used of a prop, in each case the demonstrative either reflects the speaker's distance from the object or is markedly second person ("that of yours"). I also examine the performative dimension of the vocative houtos , used to hail one whose attention is turned elsewhere. The consistency of this usage permits us a clearer understanding of the staging and meaning of several scenes, for example Helen 1627ff., where Theonoe's Attendant can plausibly be eliminated as an actor onstage. In comedy, where this usage is most prevalent, I challenge the notion that houtos is normally pejorative, arguing instead that word order and the larger constructions in which this vocative occurs lend the word its various shades of meaning. Speaking more generally, I also show that tragedy uses demonstrative reference selectively to highlight particular people and objects within a play, making them focal points of the dramatic action and plot (e.g., Agamemnon's corpse, Orestes' lock of hair, Medea's children), whereas comedy flits more indiscriminately from one object or person to the next, and that this difference in focus is generic and speaks to the type of audience engagement of each genre. In Chapter 4, I address anaphoric and cataphoric reference. The normal way to refer back in the discourse (i.e., "anaphorically") in Greek is, of course, with houtos ; hode regularly looks forward (= "cataphora"). As grammar books have long noted, when hode is used anaphorically it indicates a speaker's elevated emotional state. I begin by discussing cataphora in tragedy and satyr play--anaphora is treated in Chapter 5--before offering a detailed analysis of these two types of reference in Aristophanes. A cross-genre comparison reveals that while hode is used more often than houtos in tragedy and satyr play, particularly in anaphoric reference, Aristophanes rarely uses hode to refer backward. When he does, it is always either paratragic or in a scene of intense excitement. Based on the types of uses found in Aristophanes we are thus afforded a clear view of the rhetorical and emotional effects of "normal" tragic diction; the relative infrequency of hode in Aristophanes appears, then, to confirm at the linguistic level the observation that comedy is less emotionally engaging than tragedy or satyr play. Or, to put it another way, the exceptional frequency of hode in tragedy and satyr play (much the highest rate for any Greek literary genre) creates an intensity and immediacy that necessarily draws the audience strongly into the fictional world of these plays. I begin Chapter 5 by providing a systematic analysis of anaphoric uses of the proximal demonstrative, and then step back to consider the audience's overall experience in witnessing dramatic performances in the Great Dionysia (and Lenaia). I suggest that this experience is analogous to the act of "sacred pilgrimage" ( theoria ), wherein a member of the community would journey abroad, witness something, and return home with an expanded world-view to share with his city. That is, the theater audience progresses from a sense of inclusion in the manifold worlds of the tragic tetralogies, brought about in large part by spatial and anaphoric uses of hode , toward a subsequent disengagement from these other times and places achieved by the comic performances through, amongst other things, a less intense spatial focus, more direct audience address, and colloquial diction. Athens and her citizens thus reap the political, social, and psychological benefits of theoria by traveling to the other places (and times) imaginatively experienced at the dramatic festivals, and all without ever leaving the theater.
BASE
Greek Drama on a Global Stage
In: World policy journal: WPJ, Band 29, Heft 4, S. 74-84
ISSN: 1936-0924
Greek Drama on a global stage
In: World policy journal: WPJ ; a publication of the World Policy Institute, Band 29, Heft 4, S. 74-84
ISSN: 0740-2775
World Affairs Online
Rent Seeking in the Greek Economic Drama
In: The independent review: journal of political economy, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 95-98
ISSN: 1086-1653