Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- PART I: TEXT IN CONTEXT
- 1 ‘Telling the tale’: a performing tradition from Homer to pantomime
- 2 Ancient theatre and performance culture
- 3 Religion and drama
- 4 The socio-political dimension of ancient tragedy
- 5 Aristotle’s Poetics and ancient dramatic theory
- 6 Politics and Aristophanes: watchword ‘Caution!’
- 7 Comedy and society from Menander to Terence
- 8 Lost theatre and performance traditions in Greece and Italy
- PART II: THE NATURE OF PERFORMANCE
- Playwrights and plays
- Glossary of Greek and Latin words and terms
- Select bibliography
- Index
8 - Lost theatre and performance traditions in Greece and Italy
from PART I: - TEXT IN CONTEXT
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2009
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- PART I: TEXT IN CONTEXT
- 1 ‘Telling the tale’: a performing tradition from Homer to pantomime
- 2 Ancient theatre and performance culture
- 3 Religion and drama
- 4 The socio-political dimension of ancient tragedy
- 5 Aristotle’s Poetics and ancient dramatic theory
- 6 Politics and Aristophanes: watchword ‘Caution!’
- 7 Comedy and society from Menander to Terence
- 8 Lost theatre and performance traditions in Greece and Italy
- PART II: THE NATURE OF PERFORMANCE
- Playwrights and plays
- Glossary of Greek and Latin words and terms
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Browsing the Ancient Drama shelves of the average library, one could be forgiven for concluding that tragedy and comedy were by far the most frequent and important theatrical activities throughout antiquity, with just the occasional cameo appearance by the satyr play. But, from the protodramatic padded 'komasts' of sixth-century BC Greece to the exquisite musical dance theatre beloved of the Romans up to and beyond the sixth century AD, comedy and tragedy were surrounded on all sides by an extended family of other theatrical forms. If we ignore these lost traditions - festive mockeries, mythological burlesques, satires, farces, comical tragedies, history plays and dance dramas - we deny ourselves rich sources of knowledge and understanding about the array of theatrical activities in these ancient societies, as well as the nature and significance of their more famous cousins.
Alongside these more or less 'theatrical' traditions were a host of other performance activities by musicians, maskers, magicians, dancers, jugglers, poetry performers, exhibition speakers, tightrope walkers (in all shapes and sizes), sword-swallowers, storytellers, engineers, acrobats, escapologists, performing animals and others. Paratheatrical performances like these were to be found in the most unexpected places: at funerals, processions, dinner parties, in schools, on the streets, in front of temples, in the marketplace, in the countryside, at horse-races, at athletic and gladiatorial contests as well as on the stage itself; performance was a particularly flexible form of currency in the unceasing transactions of cultural change.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Greek and Roman Theatre , pp. 139 - 160Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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