Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- PART I: TEXT IN CONTEXT
- PART II: THE NATURE OF PERFORMANCE
- 9 Art and theatre in the ancient world
- 10 Festivals and audiences in Athens and Rome
- 11 Playing places: the temporary and the permanent
- 12 Chorus and dance in the ancient world
- 13 Masks in Greek and Roman theatre
- 14 A material world: costume, properties and scenic effects
- 15 Commodity: asking the wrong questions
- 16 The dramatic legacy of myth: Oedipus in opera, radio, television and film
- Playwrights and plays
- Glossary of Greek and Latin words and terms
- Select bibliography
- Index
12 - Chorus and dance in the ancient world
from PART II: - THE NATURE OF PERFORMANCE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2009
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- PART I: TEXT IN CONTEXT
- PART II: THE NATURE OF PERFORMANCE
- 9 Art and theatre in the ancient world
- 10 Festivals and audiences in Athens and Rome
- 11 Playing places: the temporary and the permanent
- 12 Chorus and dance in the ancient world
- 13 Masks in Greek and Roman theatre
- 14 A material world: costume, properties and scenic effects
- 15 Commodity: asking the wrong questions
- 16 The dramatic legacy of myth: Oedipus in opera, radio, television and film
- Playwrights and plays
- Glossary of Greek and Latin words and terms
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
The cosmic dance
The performance of ancient dance is largely irrecoverable. Any attempt to recover it involves many technical problems and this essay does not make the attempt. Nor will I provide an encyclopaedic summary of information and views about ancient dance in its immense variety in time and place. My main focus will be on the ways in which the functions and the associations of dance in ancient society differ from those of dance in modern society. A crucial place in this argument will be occupied by theatrical dance.
In Hindu religion Shiva dances the Anandatandava (the dance of bliss), symbolizing the cosmic cycles of creation and destruction, the rhythms of birth and death and the perennial movements of the cosmos. In the hymns of the Veda, the dawn, Ushas, is described as a dancer who appears on a stage. This has no parallel in the Judaeo-Christian tradition. But in Sophocles' Antigone the chorus invoke Dionysus as a choragos (dance-leader) of the fire-breathing stars (1146-7). Plato (Timaeus 40c) describes the heavenly bodies with their 'juxtapositions and their approximations...circling as in dance', and in another work ascribed to Plato the stars are said to move 'through the figures of the fairest and most glorious of dances' (Epinomis 982e). Five centuries later Lucian writes that:
Dance came into being contemporaneously with the primal origin of the universe, making her appearance together with Love – the love that is age-old. In fact, the concord of the heavenly spheres, the interlacing of the errant planets with the fixed stars, their rhythmic agreement and timed harmony, are proofs that Dance was primordial.
(On the Dance 7)- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Greek and Roman Theatre , pp. 227 - 246Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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