Aristophanes' engagement with tragedy is one of the most striking
features of his comedies: Euripides appears repeatedly as a character
in these plays, jokes about tragedy and tragic poets abound, and
parodies of tragedy frequently underlie whole scenes and even the
plots of these plays. _Tragedy on the Comic Stage_ contextualizes this
engagement with tragedy within Greek comedy as a genre by examining
paratragedy in the fragments of Aristophanes' contemporaries and
successors in the fifth and fourth centuries. Farmer organizes these
fragments under two rubrics. First, he discusses fragments that show
characters discussing tragedy, use tragic poets as characters, or make
reference to the dramatic festivals; these fragments, Farmer argues,
develop a “culture of tragedy” within Greek comedy, a consistent
set of tropes and devices that depict tragedy as part of the world
inhabited by the characters of these plays. Second, he assembles
fragments that show tragic parody, imitations of tragedy that render
tragic language humorous or ironic by juxtaposing it with the base
characters and quotidian circumstances that make up Greek comedy.
Tragedy on the Comic Stage then illustrates these features of
fragmentary paratragedy within three intact Aristophanic comedies:
Wasps, Women at the Thesmophoria, and Wealth. These new readings of
Aristophanes' plays show the value of reading Aristophanes in
conjunction with the comic fragments, and insist on the subtlety and
complexity of Aristophanic paratragedy.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190630713
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter