Drawing on Jean-Luc Nancy’s thesis that “myth’s force and foundation are essential to community and there can be, therefore, no community outside of myth”, this paper examines the author’s experience as a theatre spectator in the Greek capital. After her inbound flight was cancelled due to a strike called by Greek workers on 15 July 2010, reaching Athens seemed impossible. Nonetheless, she eventually attended Rimini Protokoll’s Prometheus in Athens, an adaptation starring non-professional Athenian performers. The project opened weeks after the height of the Greek financial crisis, at a time when the ‘European community’, along with its ‘democratic’ principles, were threatened with collapse. With the economic, social and political contin...
In the Hellenistic period, more than ever, the theatre played an essential part in ordinary life in ...
In the Hellenistic period, more than ever, the theatre played an essential part in ordinary life in ...
By analysing how the audience interpreted the many voices of tragic performance, this chapter sugges...
Taking as its starting point Nancy’s and Barthes’ concepts of myth, this thesis investigates discou...
Why do revivals and adaptations of Greek tragedy still abound in twenty-first-century European natio...
This work is the first full-length study of the dissemination of Greek tragedy in the earliest perio...
The examination of the social and performative fields of the first Greek Shakespearian performances ...
Home Visit Europe by Rimini Protokoll is a performance without performers, only an audience taking p...
In the year 411 BC, Athens endured a brief but violent political revolution at a moment when the cit...
This work is the first full-length study of the dissemination of Greek tragedy in the earliest perio...
The 1990s witnessed a major turning point in the development of modern Greektheatre. Researchers of ...
THEATER OF THE PEOPLE: SPECTATORS AND SOCIETY IN ANCIENT ATHENS Greek drama has been subject to ong...
My thesis explores the process of finding a new way to approach Ancient Greek theatre. Through a com...
Home Visit Europe by Rimini Protokoll is a performance without performers, only an audience taking p...
Ancient Drama constitutes a unique cultural synthesis of elements focusing on the Athenian democracy...
In the Hellenistic period, more than ever, the theatre played an essential part in ordinary life in ...
In the Hellenistic period, more than ever, the theatre played an essential part in ordinary life in ...
By analysing how the audience interpreted the many voices of tragic performance, this chapter sugges...
Taking as its starting point Nancy’s and Barthes’ concepts of myth, this thesis investigates discou...
Why do revivals and adaptations of Greek tragedy still abound in twenty-first-century European natio...
This work is the first full-length study of the dissemination of Greek tragedy in the earliest perio...
The examination of the social and performative fields of the first Greek Shakespearian performances ...
Home Visit Europe by Rimini Protokoll is a performance without performers, only an audience taking p...
In the year 411 BC, Athens endured a brief but violent political revolution at a moment when the cit...
This work is the first full-length study of the dissemination of Greek tragedy in the earliest perio...
The 1990s witnessed a major turning point in the development of modern Greektheatre. Researchers of ...
THEATER OF THE PEOPLE: SPECTATORS AND SOCIETY IN ANCIENT ATHENS Greek drama has been subject to ong...
My thesis explores the process of finding a new way to approach Ancient Greek theatre. Through a com...
Home Visit Europe by Rimini Protokoll is a performance without performers, only an audience taking p...
Ancient Drama constitutes a unique cultural synthesis of elements focusing on the Athenian democracy...
In the Hellenistic period, more than ever, the theatre played an essential part in ordinary life in ...
In the Hellenistic period, more than ever, the theatre played an essential part in ordinary life in ...
By analysing how the audience interpreted the many voices of tragic performance, this chapter sugges...