The plays of Aristophanes are the only examples of ancient Greek comedy that we have, but his comedies are an excellent example of the genre and how the style of comedic plays changed throughout Athens’ rise and decline. Aristophanes’ plays performed well in general and he wrote over a span of many years. His comedies addressed political and social issues that Athenians faced and he offered advice to the audience concerning them. Comedy has been used as a mechanism for creating social cohesion in audiences throughout time. In this thesis, I argue that based on how well the play ranked in competition social bonds were created amongst members of the audience. I look at three of Aristophanes’ plays: The Clouds, Thesmophoriazusae, and The Frogs...
This thesis investigates the concept of leadership in four comedies of Aristophanes. In the first ch...
Thesmophoriazusae was performed in Athens in 411 BCE, most likely at the City Dionysia, and is among...
This thesis looks at the symposium and komos in Aristophanes and the comic fragments from two angles...
The plays of Aristophanes are the only examples of ancient Greek comedy that we have, but his comedi...
This chapter explores the idea of Old Comedy as popular culture, by examining (i) the size, make-up ...
The material of this thesis is the area of personal humour roughly covered by τὸ ὸνομαστὶ κωμῳεν - t...
Flying to Heaven to demand an end to war, building Cloudcuckooland in the sky, descending to Hades t...
The text is a kind of report of reading in comic means used in one of Aristophanes’ best comedies – ...
The Greek comic poet Aristophanes often comments on the value of different comic modes. When he arti...
De Ste. Croix famously argued that Aristophanes had a conservative political outlook and attempted t...
The Aristophanic comedy has been relentlessly criticizing the political, social and economic decline...
What can positive psychology tell us about the ancient audience’s experience of Aristophanic comedy?...
Mockery of tragedy is a striking and recurrent feature of the poetry of Aristophanes. Critics have s...
Comedy, which developed as a literary genre after tragedy, is a popular dramatic form in ancient Gre...
This thesis examines the form and function of insults, threats, and aggressive slapstick in the come...
This thesis investigates the concept of leadership in four comedies of Aristophanes. In the first ch...
Thesmophoriazusae was performed in Athens in 411 BCE, most likely at the City Dionysia, and is among...
This thesis looks at the symposium and komos in Aristophanes and the comic fragments from two angles...
The plays of Aristophanes are the only examples of ancient Greek comedy that we have, but his comedi...
This chapter explores the idea of Old Comedy as popular culture, by examining (i) the size, make-up ...
The material of this thesis is the area of personal humour roughly covered by τὸ ὸνομαστὶ κωμῳεν - t...
Flying to Heaven to demand an end to war, building Cloudcuckooland in the sky, descending to Hades t...
The text is a kind of report of reading in comic means used in one of Aristophanes’ best comedies – ...
The Greek comic poet Aristophanes often comments on the value of different comic modes. When he arti...
De Ste. Croix famously argued that Aristophanes had a conservative political outlook and attempted t...
The Aristophanic comedy has been relentlessly criticizing the political, social and economic decline...
What can positive psychology tell us about the ancient audience’s experience of Aristophanic comedy?...
Mockery of tragedy is a striking and recurrent feature of the poetry of Aristophanes. Critics have s...
Comedy, which developed as a literary genre after tragedy, is a popular dramatic form in ancient Gre...
This thesis examines the form and function of insults, threats, and aggressive slapstick in the come...
This thesis investigates the concept of leadership in four comedies of Aristophanes. In the first ch...
Thesmophoriazusae was performed in Athens in 411 BCE, most likely at the City Dionysia, and is among...
This thesis looks at the symposium and komos in Aristophanes and the comic fragments from two angles...