Keith Sidwell, Aristophanes the democrat: the politics of satirical comedy during the Peloponnesian War, Cambridge - New York, 2009.
Éditeur : Cambridge University Press
XV-407 pages
ISBN : 9780521519984
99 $
This book provides a new interpretation of the nature of Old Comedy and its place at the heart of Athenian democratic politics. Professor Sidwell argues that Aristophanes and his rivals belonged to opposing political groups, each with their own political agenda. Through disguised caricature and parody of their rivals' work, the poets expressed and fuelled the political conflict between their factions. Professor Sidwell rereads the principal texts of Aristophanes and the fragmented remains of the work of his rivals in the light of his arguments for the political foundations of the genre.
Table des matières:
Detail of illustration viii
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xii
List of abbreviations xiv
PART I SETTING THE STAGE 1
1 Getting to grips with the politics of Old Comedy 3
2 Metacomedy and politics 31
3 Metacomedy and caricature 45
PART II THE POETS' WAR 105
4 Acharnians: Parabasis versus play 107
5 Metacomedy, caricature and politics from Knights to Peace 155
6 Metacomedy, caricature and politics from Autolycus to Frogs 217
Conclusions and consequences 299
PART III APPENDICES 303
Appendix 1 The view from the theatron 305
Appendix 2 Metacomedy and caricature in the surviving fourth-century plays of Aristophanes 337
Appendix 3 Timeline and proposed relationships between comedies 341
Appendix 4 The date of Eupolis' Taxiarchoi 346
Appendix 5 Clouds 868–73 and τραυλίζω 349
Appendix 6 Michael Vickers on Strepsiades and Pericles 350
Bibliography 352
Index 363
Index Locorum 382
Index of Modern Scholars 406
Source : Fabula
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