List of illustrations; List of contributors; Preface; Plan of the city of Athens; Part I. Tragedy as an Institution: The Historical Context: 1. 'Deep plays': theatre as process in Greek civic life Paul Cartledge; 2. A show for Dionysus P. E. Easterling; 3. The audience of Athenian tragedy Simon Goldhill; 4. The pictorial record Oliver Taplin; Part II. The Plays: 5. The sociology of Athenian tragedy Edith Hall; 6. The language of tragedy: rhetoric and communication Simon Goldhill; 7. Form and performance P. E. Easterling; 8. Myth into mythos: the shaping of tragic plots Peter Burian; Part III. Reception: 9. From repertoire to canon P. E. Easterling; 10. Tragedy adapted for stages and screens: the Renaissance to the present Peter Burian; 11. Tragedy in performance: nineteenth- and twentieth-century productions Fiona Macintosh; 12. Modern critical approaches Simon Goldhill; Glossary; Chronology; Texts, commentaries and translations; Works cited; Index.
This book deals with the historical context of ancient Greek tragic performances, with the plays themselves, and with later adaptation and re-performance, down to modern times.
'As a resource for teachers it is invaluable … Where else can such
a wealth be found in one volume on tragedy?' JACT Review
'Classical scholars will find much to think about … and their
students will find it invaluable. [The] book contains chapters that
will launch a thousand essays. One may only hope that
non-classicists will also be encouraged to explore the world of
tragedy.' The Times Literary Supplement
'… an innovative and authoritative work which not only is easily
the and paedagogically most useful handbook for the study of this
most influential of Greek cultural productions; in addition, the
contributors all forward the restless debate on tragedy and its
heritage as they delineate it'. The Anglo-Hellenic Review
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