Brill's Companion to Roman Tragedy: Brill's Companions to Classical Studies
George W.M. Harrisonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 aug 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004231597
ISBN-10: 9004231595
Pagini: 450
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Companions to Classical Studies
ISBN-10: 9004231595
Pagini: 450
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Companions to Classical Studies
Cuprins
Introduction: Roman Tragedy at the Intersection: Reception and Response
George W.M. Harrison
Part I: REPUBLIC
Editing Roman (Republican) Tragedy: Challenges and Possible Solutions
Gesine Manuwald, University College London
The Argo Killed Hippolytus: Roman Tragedy in the (Meta-)Theatre
Mario Erasmo, University of Georgia
Roman Tragedy -- Ciceronian Tragedy? Cicero's Influence on Our Perception of Republican
Roman Tragedy
Petra Schierl, University of Basel
240 BCE and all that: the Romanness of Republican tragedy
Robert Cowan, University of Sydney
PART II: EMPIRE
The editio of Roman Tragedy
Thomas D. Kohn, Wayne State University
Rhetorical Tragedy: The Logic of Decalamation
David Konstan, New York University
Seneca on the Fall of Troy
George W. M. Harrison
Seneca's Thyestes and the Political Tradition in Roman Tragedy
P. J. Davis, University of Tasmania
PART III: INTERCHANGE WITH OTHER GENRES
Epic Elements in Senecan Tragedy
Annette Baertschi, Bryn Mawr College
The Reception of Latin Archaic Tragedy in Ovid's Elegy
Marco Filippi
Roman Tragedy and Philosophy
Christopher Star, Middlebury College
Tragic Rome? Roman Tragedy and the Genre of Tragedy
Lauren Donovan Ginsberg, University of Cincinnati
Roman Tragedy and Philosophy
Christopher Star, Middlebury College
Theatrical Language and Philosophical Issues in Seneca's Tragedies: Cued and Unannounced Entrances (Especially Oedipus 81 and 784)
Jean-Pierre Aygon, University of Tolouse
Roman Tragedy through a Comic Lens
Niall W. Slater, Emory University
PART IV: SENECA AFTER ANTIQUITY
Schlegel, Shelley and the ‘Death’ of Seneca
Helen Slaney, Oxford University
Seneca Tragicus in the twentieth century: Hugo Claus' adaptations of Oedipus and Thyestes
Betine Van Zyl Smit, University of Nottingham
T.S. Eliot’s Seneca
Gregory Staley, University of Maryland
Afterword
A Day at the Races Theatre: The Spectacle of Performance in the Roman Empire
George W.M. Harrison
George W.M. Harrison
Part I: REPUBLIC
Editing Roman (Republican) Tragedy: Challenges and Possible Solutions
Gesine Manuwald, University College London
The Argo Killed Hippolytus: Roman Tragedy in the (Meta-)Theatre
Mario Erasmo, University of Georgia
Roman Tragedy -- Ciceronian Tragedy? Cicero's Influence on Our Perception of Republican
Roman Tragedy
Petra Schierl, University of Basel
240 BCE and all that: the Romanness of Republican tragedy
Robert Cowan, University of Sydney
PART II: EMPIRE
The editio of Roman Tragedy
Thomas D. Kohn, Wayne State University
Rhetorical Tragedy: The Logic of Decalamation
David Konstan, New York University
Seneca on the Fall of Troy
George W. M. Harrison
Seneca's Thyestes and the Political Tradition in Roman Tragedy
P. J. Davis, University of Tasmania
PART III: INTERCHANGE WITH OTHER GENRES
Epic Elements in Senecan Tragedy
Annette Baertschi, Bryn Mawr College
The Reception of Latin Archaic Tragedy in Ovid's Elegy
Marco Filippi
Roman Tragedy and Philosophy
Christopher Star, Middlebury College
Tragic Rome? Roman Tragedy and the Genre of Tragedy
Lauren Donovan Ginsberg, University of Cincinnati
Roman Tragedy and Philosophy
Christopher Star, Middlebury College
Theatrical Language and Philosophical Issues in Seneca's Tragedies: Cued and Unannounced Entrances (Especially Oedipus 81 and 784)
Jean-Pierre Aygon, University of Tolouse
Roman Tragedy through a Comic Lens
Niall W. Slater, Emory University
PART IV: SENECA AFTER ANTIQUITY
Schlegel, Shelley and the ‘Death’ of Seneca
Helen Slaney, Oxford University
Seneca Tragicus in the twentieth century: Hugo Claus' adaptations of Oedipus and Thyestes
Betine Van Zyl Smit, University of Nottingham
T.S. Eliot’s Seneca
Gregory Staley, University of Maryland
Afterword
A Day at the Races Theatre: The Spectacle of Performance in the Roman Empire
George W.M. Harrison
Recenzii
"Harrison's new companion is notable for its ability to offer sure guidance not only to recent controversies and findings, but also to avenues for further exploration and development. There is much to like in this volume." – Christopher Trinacty, in: Classical Journal-Online, 2016.08.06
Notă biografică
George W.M. Harrison, Ph.D. (1985) Johns Hopkins University, holds a joint appointment in Greek and Roman Studies and in Technology, Society and Environmental Studies at Carleton University (Ottawa). He has spoken and published extensively on Roman imperial tragedy and has been associated with the production of several ancient plays in modern performance.
Contributors are: Jean-Pierre Aygon, Annette M. Baertschi, Robert Cowan, Peter J. Davis, Mario Erasmo, Marco Filippi, Lauren Donovan Ginsberg, George W.M. Harrison, Thomas D. Kohn, David Konstan, Gesine Manuwald, Petra Schierl, Helen Slaney, Niall W, Slater, Gregory Staley, Christopher Star and Betine van Zyl Smit.
Contributors are: Jean-Pierre Aygon, Annette M. Baertschi, Robert Cowan, Peter J. Davis, Mario Erasmo, Marco Filippi, Lauren Donovan Ginsberg, George W.M. Harrison, Thomas D. Kohn, David Konstan, Gesine Manuwald, Petra Schierl, Helen Slaney, Niall W, Slater, Gregory Staley, Christopher Star and Betine van Zyl Smit.