توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Athenian Comedy in the Roman Empire
نام کتاب : Athenian Comedy in the Roman Empire
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : کمدی آتن در امپراتوری روم
سری :
نویسندگان : C.W. Marshall, Tom Hawkins (editors)
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2016
تعداد صفحات : 305
ISBN (شابک) : 9781472588845 , 9781472588869
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 3 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover page\nHalftitle page\nSeries page\nTitle page\nCopyright page\nContents\nAcknowledgements\n Note on transliteration and names\n1 Ignorance and the Reception of Comedy in Antiquity\n Classical Athenian comedy (486–323 bce )\n Comedy in the Hellenistic era (323–31 bce )\n Athenian comedy in the Roman empire (31 bce –)\n Notes\n2 Juvenal and the Revival of Greek New Comedy at Rome\n I. Greek actors and Roman festivals\n II. Comic scripts, elite recitations, and a new togata\n Notes\n3 Parrhēsia and Pudenda : Speaking Genitals and Satiric Speech\n Speaking genitals and parrhēsia in Aristophanes\n Ritual etiologies for the ‘organ without a body’: the phallus- pole and baubo\n Roman receptions: Horace, Persius, and Juvenal\n Petronius and the death of the speaking penis\n Skoptic prosopopoeia in Martial\n Under pressure: male hysteria\n Notes\n4 Dio Chrysostom and the Naked Parabasis\n Parabases in Old Comedy and beyond\n Dio’s naked parabases\n Dio’s parabatic strategy\n Notes\n5 Favorinus and the Comic Adultery Plot\n I. Transvestism, eunuchism, and the comic plot in Athenian drama\n II. Ancient sources on the sexuality of eunuchs\n III. Transvestism and eunuch adultery in the literature of the Second Sophistic\n IV. The eunuch adulterer in the rhetorical tradition\n V. Comic eunuchism and sophistic self- fashioning\n Conclusion\n Notes\n6 Comedies and Comic Actors in the Greek East: An Epigraphical Perspective\n I.\n II.\n III.\n IV.\n V.\n Epigraphical publications\n Notes\n7 Plutarch, Epitomes, and Athenian Comedy\n Notes\n8 Lucian’s Aristophanes: On Understanding Old Comedy in the Roman Imperial Period\n Plutarch on Aristophanes\n The Dead Come to Life, or the Fisherman and Lucian’s satiric program\n Lucian’s Double Indictment ( Bis Accusatus ) and Old Comedy\n Concluding thoughts\n Notes\n9 Exposing Frauds: Lucian and Comedy\n Notes\n10 Revoking Comic License: Aristides’ Or. 29 and the Performance of Comedy\n I. Performance\n II. Aristides on comedy\n Notes\n11 Aelian and Comedy: Four Studies\n I. Socrates goes to the theatre\n II. Plays Aelian knows\n III. The structure of Rustic Letters\n IV. Eupolis and his puppy.\n Notes\n12 The Menandrian World of Alciphron’s Letters\n Tracing Menander in the Letters\n The special case of the Ἐπιστολαὶ Ἑταιρικαί\n The epistolary Menander\n Notes\n13 Two Clouded Marriages: Aristainetos’ Allusions to Aristophanes’ Clouds in Letters 2.3 and 2.12\n A literary diptych\n An epistolary quartet\n Postscript: Clearing- up dirty joke in Clouds\n Notes\nBibliography\nIndex\nUntitled\nUntitled