1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910978247003321

Autore

Gianvittorio-Ungar Laura

Titolo

Narratives at Play in Aeschylus : Perspectives on Genre and Poetics / / Laura Gianvittorio-Ungar

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden ; ; Boston : , : Brill, , 2025

©2025

ISBN

9789004715806

9004715800

Edizione

[First edition.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (310 pages)

Collana

Classical Studies E-Books Online, Collection 2024

Mnemosyne, Supplements ; ; 491

Disciplina

025.4/3

Soggetti

Classical Studies

Greek & Latin Literature

Literature and Cultural Studies

Literary criticism

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Front Cover -- ‎Half-Title Page -- ‎Series Title Page -- ‎Title Page -- ‎Copyright Page -- ‎Contents -- ‎Acknowledgements -- ‎Note on Texts and Abbreviations -- ‎Part 1. Frameworks -- ‎Chapter 1. A Novel Take on Tragic Narrativity -- ‎1.1. Aeschylus' Narrative Drama -- ‎1.1.1. Why Narrative Drama? -- ‎1.1.2. Past and Current Approaches to Tragic Narratives -- ‎1.1.3. This Book's Approach -- ‎1.2. What Narrative Drama Can and Cannot Help With -- ‎1.2.1. Approaches to Narrative Performance -- ‎1.2.2. Evolutionary Models of Tragedy -- ‎1.2.3. A plaidoyer for mimēsis -- ‎Chapter 2. Notions of Genre, Ancient and Modern -- ‎2.1. Narrative, Drama, and Their Middle Ground -- ‎2.1.1. Plato: Who Gives Voice and Body to the Poem? -- ‎2.1.2. Aristotle on Genre and Performance -- ‎2.1.3. Cross-Overs of Narrative and Drama: Ancient Views -- ‎2.2. Generic Projections -- ‎2.2.1. Text Transfers -- ‎2.2.2. Defining Genres through their History -- ‎2.2.3. "Nothing Happens, Really, It Is Just Talk, Talk, Talk" -- ‎Part 2. Applications -- ‎Chapter 3. A Functional Analysis -- ‎3.1. Criteria and Categories -- ‎3.1.1. Criteria -- ‎3.1.2. Action -- ‎3.1.3. Narrative -- ‎3.1.4. Response



-- ‎3.2. Analysis -- ‎3.2.1. Persians -- ‎3.2.2. Seven against Thebes -- ‎3.2.3. Suppliant Women -- ‎3.2.4. Prometheus -- ‎Chapter 4. Narrative Drama: Features and Functioning -- ‎4.1. The Presence of Narrative -- ‎4.1.1. Synoptic Tables -- ‎4.1.2. Quantifying Narrative -- ‎4.1.3. Narrative-Based Structure -- ‎4.2. Narrative's Performativity -- ‎4.2.1. How to Do Things with Narratives -- ‎4.2.2. Parameters of Performativity -- ‎4.2.3. The Motor of Drama -- ‎4.3. Influences of Narrative on the Plot -- ‎4.3.1. Unitary and Disunited Plot -- ‎4.3.2. Elastic Plots -- ‎4.3.3. Anachronisms and Displacements -- ‎4.4. Dramatizing Narratives: Some Techniques.

‎4.4.1. Breaking Down Narratives into Dialogues -- ‎4.4.2. Dramatizing Catalogues -- ‎4.4.3. Playing with Focalization -- ‎Conclusions. From Tragic Narratives towards New Narratives of Tragedy -- ‎Appendix. The Reception of the Classical Speech Criterion -- ‎Bibliography -- ‎Index Locorum -- Back Cover.

Sommario/riassunto

So little happens in the earliest surviving plays that their dramatic status almost escapes the reader. This calls for a revision of traditional views and historiographies of dramatic literature: for example, how did action come to define drama, and how did these genre developments influence reception? Above all, what constitutes drama when action is as optional as it apparently was in the 470s-460s BCE? This book rethinks Aeschylean theatre as a practice that combines elements of storytelling with enacted responses to them, and reads the literary remains of this practice from cross-generic perspectives (ancient, modern, and transhistorical). Recognizing the importance of embedded narratives in Aeschylus helps us adapt our poetological frameworks to his art at last, rather than vice versa.