The paper examines the surviving references to the setting of the rapes in New Comedy. It argues that the fact that rapes are commonly set in the course of nocturnal festival activities should not be seen merely as a convenient plot device. By using Menander's Epitrepontes as a case study, the paper suggests that there is a close relationship between the character of the festivals where rapes are set and a major theme in the plays themselves: namely, the maturation of the young protagonists and their transition into adulthood. The paper also offers a reassessment of the evidence we have for the Tauropolia, the Attic festival where the rape is set in the Epitrepontes.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
The concept of metatheatre, defined by N. Slater as « theatrically self-conscious theatre, i.e., the...
Abstract The prolific playwrights whose names are associated with comedy are Aristophanes, Johnson, ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
The paper examines the surviving references to the setting of the rapes in New Comedy. It argues tha...
This paper is concerned with the rape of young girls which is one of the main elements in Greco-Roma...
Menander worked in a restrictive genre that limited his opportunities to create variation between pl...
Menander worked in a restrictive genre that limited his opportunities to create variation between pl...
Rape plays an essential role in Roman comedy plays, also called palliatia, which is a difficult subj...
The article includes a selective textual commentary on lines 693-701 and 786-823 of Menander's play ...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Context: society (gender, slavery, war) -- Money and l...
The poets of Greek New Comedy often arouse the expectations of the audience with the aim of cheating...
peer reviewedThe concept of metatheatre is outstanding for the study of ancient theatre, both Greek ...
This Independent Study examines the work of the Greek comic playwright Menander, who lived from abou...
Une nouvelle publication sur Ménandre. Menander in contexts Edited by Alan H. Sommerstein Routledge...
This paper examines the implications of the opposition ‘Athenian sun’ versus ‘Pontic fog’ for a bett...
The concept of metatheatre, defined by N. Slater as « theatrically self-conscious theatre, i.e., the...
Abstract The prolific playwrights whose names are associated with comedy are Aristophanes, Johnson, ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
The paper examines the surviving references to the setting of the rapes in New Comedy. It argues tha...
This paper is concerned with the rape of young girls which is one of the main elements in Greco-Roma...
Menander worked in a restrictive genre that limited his opportunities to create variation between pl...
Menander worked in a restrictive genre that limited his opportunities to create variation between pl...
Rape plays an essential role in Roman comedy plays, also called palliatia, which is a difficult subj...
The article includes a selective textual commentary on lines 693-701 and 786-823 of Menander's play ...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Context: society (gender, slavery, war) -- Money and l...
The poets of Greek New Comedy often arouse the expectations of the audience with the aim of cheating...
peer reviewedThe concept of metatheatre is outstanding for the study of ancient theatre, both Greek ...
This Independent Study examines the work of the Greek comic playwright Menander, who lived from abou...
Une nouvelle publication sur Ménandre. Menander in contexts Edited by Alan H. Sommerstein Routledge...
This paper examines the implications of the opposition ‘Athenian sun’ versus ‘Pontic fog’ for a bett...
The concept of metatheatre, defined by N. Slater as « theatrically self-conscious theatre, i.e., the...
Abstract The prolific playwrights whose names are associated with comedy are Aristophanes, Johnson, ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...