Fr. 50.90

Performing Gods in Classical Antiquity and the Age of Shakespeare

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext Performing Gods is a lively, wide-ranging, illuminating guide to the many ways in which the stories of gods and humans in classical antiquity influenced writers in the age of Shakespeare. A pleasure to read, this fine study should appeal both to the general reader and to students of Renaissance or classical literature. Informationen zum Autor Dustin W. Dixon is Assistant Professor of Classics at Grinnell College, USA. He has held positions at Emory University and Loyola University Maryland, and he has taught courses on Greek and Roman Drama, Classical Mythology and Greek religion. His work appears in Classical Quarterly, and he is co-author of Performing Gods in Classical Antiquity and the Age of Shakespeare (Bloomsbury, 2021). John S. Garrison is the author of seven books, including Glass (Bloomsbury, 2015) and The Pleasures of Memory in Shakespeare (2024). In 2021, he was named a Guggenheim Fellow. Vorwort An evocative comparison of how two theatrical traditions have conceived of ancient gods as metaphors for the power of playwrights and actors Zusammenfassung The gods have much to tell us about performance. When human actors portray deities onstage, such divine epiphanies reveal not only the complexities of mortals playing gods but also the nature of theatrical spectacle itself. The very impossibility of rendering the gods in all their divine splendor in a truly convincing way lies at the intersection of divine power and the power of the theater. This book pursues these dynamics on the stages of ancient Athens and Rome as well on those of Renaissance England to shed new light on theatrical performance. The authors reveal how gods appear onstage both to astound and to dramatize the very machinations by which theatrical performance operates. Offering an array of case studies featuring both canonical and lesser-studied texts, this volume discusses work of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, and Plautus as well as Beaumont, Heywood, Jonson, Marlowe, and Shakespeare.This book uniquely brings together the joint perspectives of two experts on classical and Renaissance drama. This volume will appeal to students and enthusiasts of literature, classics, theater, and performance studies. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: The Gods Take StageChapter One: Approaching DivinityChapter Two: Under the Actor’s Spell: Audiences in Euripides’ Helen and Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus Chapter Three: An Actor Ascends: Status and Identity in Plautus’ Amphitruo and the Court MasqueChapter Four: Authoring Gods in Aeschylus’ Oresteia and Shakespeare’s Hamlet Chapter Five: To Die is Human, To Perform is Divine Afterword: Entertaining Gods in Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses Notes BibliographyIndex...

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