In ancient Greek culture, the chorus was a social and religious institution, a musical form, and a medium for the telling of stories, but also a situation, an event, an experience, about which there were stories to be told. As the tragedians transformed traditional choral performance into the acting out of mythical narratives, they drew on those stories, both directly and indirectly, as sources and models for dramatic action. My concern here is with the chorus as a subject of tragedy as well as feature of tragic form, and with the place of choral experience in the inner world of the tragic plot. Most theories of the tragic chorus go outside that world to find the chorus\u27 meaning: the chorus is identified with the playwright, whose views...
The musical analysis of Greek tragedy has traditionally been limited to studies of meter and metathe...
The disqualification of Aeschylus\u27s Suppliants as our earliest surviving tragedy has inevitably l...
The chorus was a key part in Attican tragedy, but had waned in importance by the time Aristotle wrot...
In ancient Greek culture, the chorus was a social and religious institution, a musical form, and a m...
For the ancient Athenians, tragedy was a species of choral poetry, a spectacular new development wit...
Over time the originally tragic chorus has undergone significant changes which have emphasised its m...
This study is an investigation of adaptations of the Greek tragic chorus since World War II, includi...
In this paper we shall try to clarify the role of the chorus in the origin and development of the an...
Includes bibliographical references.This study is an examination of the dramatic functions of the ch...
This thesis deals with how Western theatre directors have tried to solve the perceived ‘problem’ of ...
This dissertation takes a new approach to the study of Greek theater by examining the dramatic funct...
The purpose of this Independent Study is to examine the innovations of the Greek playwright Euripide...
One of the most salient aspects of the chorus in Greek tragedy is its mediation between the play and...
The contention of this article is that effective appropriation of the device of chorus of ancient At...
Ancient Greek tragedy, a genre of plays written and performed by men, features many plays dominated ...
The musical analysis of Greek tragedy has traditionally been limited to studies of meter and metathe...
The disqualification of Aeschylus\u27s Suppliants as our earliest surviving tragedy has inevitably l...
The chorus was a key part in Attican tragedy, but had waned in importance by the time Aristotle wrot...
In ancient Greek culture, the chorus was a social and religious institution, a musical form, and a m...
For the ancient Athenians, tragedy was a species of choral poetry, a spectacular new development wit...
Over time the originally tragic chorus has undergone significant changes which have emphasised its m...
This study is an investigation of adaptations of the Greek tragic chorus since World War II, includi...
In this paper we shall try to clarify the role of the chorus in the origin and development of the an...
Includes bibliographical references.This study is an examination of the dramatic functions of the ch...
This thesis deals with how Western theatre directors have tried to solve the perceived ‘problem’ of ...
This dissertation takes a new approach to the study of Greek theater by examining the dramatic funct...
The purpose of this Independent Study is to examine the innovations of the Greek playwright Euripide...
One of the most salient aspects of the chorus in Greek tragedy is its mediation between the play and...
The contention of this article is that effective appropriation of the device of chorus of ancient At...
Ancient Greek tragedy, a genre of plays written and performed by men, features many plays dominated ...
The musical analysis of Greek tragedy has traditionally been limited to studies of meter and metathe...
The disqualification of Aeschylus\u27s Suppliants as our earliest surviving tragedy has inevitably l...
The chorus was a key part in Attican tragedy, but had waned in importance by the time Aristotle wrot...