Maurizio Sonnino deconstructs the hitherto current view of mime as the original form of ‘secular’ farce giving rise to the more canonical forms of the fifth and fourth century BCE. Sonnino recovers the rich and complex plurality of submerged laughter-inducing spectacles (from the Theban Kabeirion to the italic phlyakes) connected to precise socio-ritual occasions that acted as the fertile background for more elaborate forms (in Megara, Athens, and Syracuse in particular). Son- nino shows furthermore that dramatic mime is, contrary to current opinion, a later elaborate production that underwent submersion in that it eluded the mechanisms of textual control
This dissertation analyzes Old Comedy’s generic interaction with its primary performative rivals of ...
Aeschylus used the structure of the mime in the prologue of Agamemnon (v. 1–35) and the comic topoi ...
Theatre in Ancient Greece developed into four dramatic genres: tragedy, comedy, satyrical drama and ...
Herodas, a third century contemporary of Theocritus and Callimachus, combined thematic and structura...
Le théâtre dans la Grèce Antique a développé quatre genres dramatiques : la tragédie, la comédie, le...
Greek Comedy was one of the most popular performative genres in antiquity. In particular during the ...
An investigation of the origin, evolution and actual occurrences of the mimeisthai-group of cognate ...
Origin, evolution and development of mime in ancient Greece. This chapter is part of a "History of G...
With only a few qualifications, classical scholars now generally accept the view that the word mimes...
At the beginning of the Hellenistic era, Greek theatre became a universal entertainment in the whol...
Mimesis can refer to imitation, emulation, representation, or reenactment - and it is a concept that...
This paper wants to address the Aristotelian analysis of the concept of mimesis from a social and cu...
P.Oxy. III 413 preserves two texts, respectively known as Charition and Moicheu- tria, which represe...
International audienceUsing both textual and iconographic sources, this richly illustrated book exam...
Challenging the common notion that mythological comedies simply burlesque stories found in epic and ...
This dissertation analyzes Old Comedy’s generic interaction with its primary performative rivals of ...
Aeschylus used the structure of the mime in the prologue of Agamemnon (v. 1–35) and the comic topoi ...
Theatre in Ancient Greece developed into four dramatic genres: tragedy, comedy, satyrical drama and ...
Herodas, a third century contemporary of Theocritus and Callimachus, combined thematic and structura...
Le théâtre dans la Grèce Antique a développé quatre genres dramatiques : la tragédie, la comédie, le...
Greek Comedy was one of the most popular performative genres in antiquity. In particular during the ...
An investigation of the origin, evolution and actual occurrences of the mimeisthai-group of cognate ...
Origin, evolution and development of mime in ancient Greece. This chapter is part of a "History of G...
With only a few qualifications, classical scholars now generally accept the view that the word mimes...
At the beginning of the Hellenistic era, Greek theatre became a universal entertainment in the whol...
Mimesis can refer to imitation, emulation, representation, or reenactment - and it is a concept that...
This paper wants to address the Aristotelian analysis of the concept of mimesis from a social and cu...
P.Oxy. III 413 preserves two texts, respectively known as Charition and Moicheu- tria, which represe...
International audienceUsing both textual and iconographic sources, this richly illustrated book exam...
Challenging the common notion that mythological comedies simply burlesque stories found in epic and ...
This dissertation analyzes Old Comedy’s generic interaction with its primary performative rivals of ...
Aeschylus used the structure of the mime in the prologue of Agamemnon (v. 1–35) and the comic topoi ...
Theatre in Ancient Greece developed into four dramatic genres: tragedy, comedy, satyrical drama and ...