Menander in Antiquity

Menander in Antiquity
Author: Sebastiana Nervegna
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2013-04-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107328259

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The comic playwright Menander was one of the most popular writers throughout antiquity. This book reconstructs his life and the legacy of his work until the end of antiquity employing a broad range of sources such as portraits, illustrations of his plays, papyri preserving their texts and inscriptions recording their public performances. These are placed within the context of the three social and cultural institutions which appropriated his comedy, thereby ensuring its survival: public theatres, dinner parties and schools. Dr Nervegna carefully reconstructs how each context approached Menander's drama and how it contributed to its popularity over the centuries. The resultant, highly illustrated, book will be essential for all scholars and students not just of Menander's comedy but, more broadly, of the history and iconography of the ancient theatre, ancient social history and reception studies.

Menander in Antiquity

Menander in Antiquity
Author: Sebastiana Nervegna
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 135
Release: 2013
Genre: Greek drama (Comedy)
ISBN: 1107326591

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Reconstructs the ancient afterlife of Menander by focusing on three contexts of reception: public theatre, private entertainment and schools.

Menander in Contexts

Menander in Contexts
Author: Alan H. Sommerstein
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2013-12-04
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9781135014643

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The comedies of the Athenian dramatist Menander (c. 342-291 BC) and his contemporaries were the ultimate source of a Western tradition of light drama that has continued to the present day. Yet for over a millennium, Menander’s own plays were thought to have been completely lost. Thanks to a long and continuing series of papyrus discoveries, Menander has now been able to take his place among the major surviving ancient Greek dramatists alongside Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and Aristophanes. In this book, sixteen contributors examine and explore the Menander we know today in light of the various literary, intellectual, and social contexts in which his plays can be viewed. Topics covered include: the society, culture, and politics of his generation; the intellectual currents of the period; the literary precursors who inspired Menander (or whom he expected his audiences to recall); and responses to Menander, from his own time to ours. As the first wide-ranging collective study of Menander in English, this book is essential reading for those interested in ancient comedy the world over.

Menander Epitrepontes

Menander  Epitrepontes
Author: Alan H. Sommerstein
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 153
Release: 2021-04-08
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9781350023659

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This book introduces readers who may have no previous knowledge of Menander's comedies to Epitrepontes (The Arbitration), arguably the most exquisitely crafted of his better-preserved plays. It explains what we know about the play, how we know it, and how far we can tentatively fill in the gaps in our knowledge. Sommerstein analyses the nature of the dramatic genre (Athenian New Comedy) to which Epitrepontes belongs. He assesses the plot and the characters, every one of whom makes an essential contribution to the uplifting outcome, and the social and ethical assumptions that dramatist and audience shared. As well as looking at the influences of earlier drama and of contemporary philosophical and popular thought, he considers the afterlife of Menandrian comedy in general and of Epitrepontes in particular, both in antiquity and in modern times, but also in the long period in between, when Menander was the great dramatist whose plays were thought to have been irrevocably lost.

Menander Samia The Woman from Samos

Menander  Samia  The Woman from Samos
Author: Menander
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 381
Release: 2013
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780521514286

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The first edition for half a century of any play of Menander designed for English-speaking students reading it in Greek.

Aristotle and Menander on the Ethics of Understanding

Aristotle and Menander on the Ethics of Understanding
Author: Valeria Cinaglia
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 243
Release: 2014-11-06
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9789004282827

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In Aristotle and Menander on the Ethics of Understanding, Valeria Cinaglia offers a parallel study of Menander’s New Comedy and Aristotle’s philosophy focusing on subjects ranging from epistemology and psychology to ethics. Cinaglia does not aim to demonstrate the direct philosophical influence of Aristotle on Menander, but explores the hypothesis that there are significant analogies between the two that disclose a shared thought-world. Cinaglia shows that Aristotle and Menander offer analogous views of the way that perceptions and emotional responses to situations are linked with the presence or absence of ethical and cognitive understanding, or the state of ethical character development: the study of these analogies contributes to a deeper understanding of both frameworks involved.

The Cambridge Companion to Greek Comedy

The Cambridge Companion to Greek Comedy
Author: Martin Revermann
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 523
Release: 2014-06-12
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780521760287

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This book provides a unique panorama of this challenging area of Greek literature, combining literary perspectives with historical issues and material culture.

Menander

Menander
Author: Malcolm Heath
Publsiher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 396
Release: 2004-07-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780191531781

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This book undertakes a fundamental assessment of Menander of Laodicea ('Menander Rhetor'), and of the nature and functions of rhetoric in later antiquity (second to fifth centuries AD). It examines Menander's fragments, collected here for the first time, in detail, showing that he was primarily an expert on judicial and deliberative oratory; a source-critical analysis of the Demosthenes scholia shows that his influential commentary on Demosthenes can be partially reconstructed. It explores the educational practices of the rhetorical schools, and shows that the skills which they taught still had a direct application in the subsequent careers of the rhetoricians' pupils.