A note on line 1194 of Aristophanes’ Wealth mentions the names of two of the earliest scholars of comedy in Alexandria, Lycophron of Chalcis and Eratosthenes of Cyrene. The object of their discussion, the mention of torches at the end of fifth-century comedies, could betray an interest in the evolution of Attic drama, in particular in the origins of dramatic conventions that became stereotyped in fourth- and third-century plays. It is unlikely, however, that Lycophron and Eratosthenes formally divided comedy into three phases, old, middle and new, a periodization that belongs to a later stage of studies on Attic theatre
With his now lost treatise on comedy, Lykophron (3rd cent. BC) played a part in the constitution of ...
Wealth is the last saved Aristophanes’ comedy. This is the presentation of problems of social inequa...
Sunto: Nel presente lavoro è illustrata la maschera ‘comica’ del sicofante, quale emerge da riferime...
The present article deals with the Greek dialects in Old Attic Comedy. Aristophanes is the greatest ...
In his work On the Ancient Comedy, fr. 25 Strecker, Eratosthenes of Cyrene gives a positive appraisa...
Comedy, which developed as a literary genre after tragedy, is a popular dramatic form in ancient Gre...
Thesmophoriazusae was performed in Athens in 411 BCE, most likely at the City Dionysia, and is among...
This dissertation analyzes Old Comedy’s generic interaction with its primary performative rivals of ...
De Ste. Croix famously argued that Aristophanes had a conservative political outlook and attempted t...
More than a hundred years of scholarship on the fragments of Epicharmus have produced many analyses ...
This paper examines the role of comedy in Atticist lexica by focusing on the use of Old Comedy in tw...
Flying to Heaven to demand an end to war, building Cloudcuckooland in the sky, descending to Hades t...
This paper offers a detailed analysis of crucial points in some debated comic passages (Aristophanes...
In terms of both content and form, then, Plato's 'erotic' dialogues (Lysis, Symposium and Phaedrus) ...
The significance and influence of Attic drama on Hellenistic poetry has been a topic of little consi...
With his now lost treatise on comedy, Lykophron (3rd cent. BC) played a part in the constitution of ...
Wealth is the last saved Aristophanes’ comedy. This is the presentation of problems of social inequa...
Sunto: Nel presente lavoro è illustrata la maschera ‘comica’ del sicofante, quale emerge da riferime...
The present article deals with the Greek dialects in Old Attic Comedy. Aristophanes is the greatest ...
In his work On the Ancient Comedy, fr. 25 Strecker, Eratosthenes of Cyrene gives a positive appraisa...
Comedy, which developed as a literary genre after tragedy, is a popular dramatic form in ancient Gre...
Thesmophoriazusae was performed in Athens in 411 BCE, most likely at the City Dionysia, and is among...
This dissertation analyzes Old Comedy’s generic interaction with its primary performative rivals of ...
De Ste. Croix famously argued that Aristophanes had a conservative political outlook and attempted t...
More than a hundred years of scholarship on the fragments of Epicharmus have produced many analyses ...
This paper examines the role of comedy in Atticist lexica by focusing on the use of Old Comedy in tw...
Flying to Heaven to demand an end to war, building Cloudcuckooland in the sky, descending to Hades t...
This paper offers a detailed analysis of crucial points in some debated comic passages (Aristophanes...
In terms of both content and form, then, Plato's 'erotic' dialogues (Lysis, Symposium and Phaedrus) ...
The significance and influence of Attic drama on Hellenistic poetry has been a topic of little consi...
With his now lost treatise on comedy, Lykophron (3rd cent. BC) played a part in the constitution of ...
Wealth is the last saved Aristophanes’ comedy. This is the presentation of problems of social inequa...
Sunto: Nel presente lavoro è illustrata la maschera ‘comica’ del sicofante, quale emerge da riferime...