Seneca's Tragedies and the Aesthetics of Pantomime
Autor Alessandra Zanobien Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 iul 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781474248990
ISBN-10: 1474248993
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1474248993
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
An original study which promises to elucidate controversial and difficult literature
Notă biografică
Alessandra Zanobi is an Associate of the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford, UK.
Cuprins
Introduction CChapter 1: Pantomime in the Ancient World Chapter 2: Pantomime and the structure of Seneca's tragediesChapter 3: Pantomime and descriptive running commentaries Chapter 4: Monologues of self-analysis Chapter 5: Pantomime and descriptive narrative set-pieces of Seneca's tragediesConclusion
Recenzii
This monograph makes a valuable contribution to the study of Senecan drama in light of the recent revaluation of pantomime as a prominent component of imperial performance culture. Zanobi's study no doubt is of great interest to scholars of Roman performance culture and in particular specialists of Senecan drama, who will use it as a welcome aid especially when working closely on certain controversial passages.
The book is useful as a comprehensive guide to possible aspects of Senecan tragedy that may be indebted to the genre of pantomime such as "running commentaries", descriptive narrative set-pieces, and monologues of self-analysis.
There is certainly a great deal of research and thought involved in this book. The assemblage of ancient sources on mime and pantomime is impressive. The suggestions that pantomime had a conventional vocabulary of standard gestures and dance steps (throughout chapter 1) are intriguing, and invite further comparisons with other genres, such as classical Japanese and Sanskrit dramas. And the links to pantomime offer useful insights into non-dramatic Roman literature.
Fully documented and carefully argued ... this publication is handsomely printed in a new series.
Meticulous scholarship, combined with the author's own experience as a trained dancer, have produced the most exciting and original new study of Senecan drama of the 21st century. By placing the texts in the context of Roman imperial performance culture-sung and danced rather than just recited or declaimed-Zanobi has revolutionized the way we think about these canonical tragic texts.
Seneca's Tragedies and the Aesthetics of Pantomime is a remarkable study of the use of mime and pantomime by elite writers of classical Rome. Zanobi's erudition is as deep as her range is wide. The book forces a reconsideration of longstanding assumptions about the relations between literature and other cultural practice and I recommend it to all students of Roman culture.
Alessandra Zanobi's book offers a stimulating reassessment of the aesthetics of Seneca's tragedy against the background of the danced drama of the pantomime that dominated the Roman stage in his day. By restoring this forgotten context, she breaks down the boundaries between 'high' and 'popular' culture in the Roman world and adds a new dimension, simultaneously corporeal and intensely imaginative, to Seneca's plays.
[Zanobi's] argument is both timely and persuasive ...
The book is useful as a comprehensive guide to possible aspects of Senecan tragedy that may be indebted to the genre of pantomime such as "running commentaries", descriptive narrative set-pieces, and monologues of self-analysis.
There is certainly a great deal of research and thought involved in this book. The assemblage of ancient sources on mime and pantomime is impressive. The suggestions that pantomime had a conventional vocabulary of standard gestures and dance steps (throughout chapter 1) are intriguing, and invite further comparisons with other genres, such as classical Japanese and Sanskrit dramas. And the links to pantomime offer useful insights into non-dramatic Roman literature.
Fully documented and carefully argued ... this publication is handsomely printed in a new series.
Meticulous scholarship, combined with the author's own experience as a trained dancer, have produced the most exciting and original new study of Senecan drama of the 21st century. By placing the texts in the context of Roman imperial performance culture-sung and danced rather than just recited or declaimed-Zanobi has revolutionized the way we think about these canonical tragic texts.
Seneca's Tragedies and the Aesthetics of Pantomime is a remarkable study of the use of mime and pantomime by elite writers of classical Rome. Zanobi's erudition is as deep as her range is wide. The book forces a reconsideration of longstanding assumptions about the relations between literature and other cultural practice and I recommend it to all students of Roman culture.
Alessandra Zanobi's book offers a stimulating reassessment of the aesthetics of Seneca's tragedy against the background of the danced drama of the pantomime that dominated the Roman stage in his day. By restoring this forgotten context, she breaks down the boundaries between 'high' and 'popular' culture in the Roman world and adds a new dimension, simultaneously corporeal and intensely imaginative, to Seneca's plays.
[Zanobi's] argument is both timely and persuasive ...