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Imagining Reperformance in Ancient Culture

Imagining Reperformance in Ancient Culture

Imagining Reperformance in Ancient Culture

Studies in the Traditions of Drama and Lyric
Richard Hunter, University of Cambridge
Anna Uhlig, University of California, Davis
August 2021
Available
Paperback
9781316607473

    This book offers a series of studies of the idea and practice of reperformance as it affects ancient lyric poetry and drama. Special attention is paid to the range of phenomena which fall under the heading 'reperformance', to how poets use both the reality and the 'imaginary' of reperformance to create a deep temporal sense in their work and to how audiences use their knowledge of reperformance conditions to interpret what they see and hear. The studies range in scope from Pindar and fifth-century tragedy and comedy to the choral performances and reconstructions of the Imperial Age. All chapters are informed by recent developments in performance studies, and all Greek and Latin is translated.

    • Clarifies what is meant by 'reperformance' and addresses current misunderstandings and simplifications
    • Explores a wide range of lyric and dramatic genres in both Greek and Latin
    • All Greek and Latin is translated, making it suitable for students and scholars who are not trained classicists

    Product details

    August 2021
    Paperback
    9781316607473
    351 pages
    244 × 168 × 18 mm
    0.607kg
    7 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: what is reperformance? Richard Hunter and Anna Uhlig
    • Part I. Interpretive Frames:
    • 1. Archives, repertoires, bodies and bones: thoughts on reperformance for classicists Johanna Hanink
    • 2. Performance, reperformance, preperformance: the paradox of repeating the unique in Pindaric epinician and beyond Felix Budelmann
    • 3. Thebes on stage, on site, and in the flesh Greta Hawes
    • Part II. Imagining Iteration:
    • 4. Reperformance, exile, and archive feelings: rereading Aristophanes' Acharnians and Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus Mario Telò
    • 5. Models of reperformance in Bacchylides Anna Uhlig
    • 6. Mimêsis, mortality and reperformance: the dead among the living in Hecuba and Hamlet Karen Bassi
    • 7. Double act: reperforming history in the Octavia Erica Bexley
    • Part III. Texts and Contexts:
    • 8. Festival, symposium and epinician (re)performance: the case of Nemean 4 and others Bruno Currie
    • 9. Comedy and reperformance Richard Hunter
    • 10. Performance, transmission and the loss of Hellenistic lyric poetry Giambattista D'Alessio
    • 11. Reperformance and embodied knowledge in Roman pantomime Ruth Webb
    • Reflections: Is this reperformance? Simon Goldhill.
      Contributors
    • Richard Hunter, Anna Uhlig, Johanna Hanink, Felix Budelmann, Greta Hawes, Mario Telò, Karen Bassi, Erica Bexley, Bruno Currie, Giambattista D'Alessio, Ruth Webb, Simon Goldhill

    • Editors
    • Richard Hunter , University of Cambridge

      Richard Hunter is Regius Professor of Greek in the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity College. His most recent books include Plato and the Traditions of Ancient Literature: The Silent Stream (Cambridge, 2012), Hesiodic Voices: Studies in the Ancient Reception of Hesiod's Works and Days (Cambridge, 2014) and Apollonius of Rhodes: Argonautica Book IV (Cambridge, 2015).

    • Anna Uhlig , University of California, Davis

      Anna Uhlig is Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of California, Davis. She has published on Greek lyric and dramatic poetry of the Archaic and Classical periods, and is completing a study of Pindar and Aeschylus.