Comic Angels - Oliver Taplin: Comic Angels and other Approaches to Greek Drama through Vase-Painting. Pp. xii+129; 24 plates, 1 map, 3 line drawings. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993. Cased, £35.

1994 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 262-263
Author(s):  
John Wilkins
Classics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Meineck

Greek theater production means the physical manner in which ancient Greek (mainly Athenian) drama was realized in the theater. This includes the use of masks, costumes, props; set, machinery, and vehicles; the way in which the architectural form of the theater affected the staging (such as entrances and exits); the stage movements (blocking) of the performers; the financial elements that enabled the production of the plays; and the wider cultural environment of the religious festivals within which ancient Greek drama was performed. Although tragedy, comedy and satyrlike performances are attested to elsewhere in the Greek world, most of our evidence for drama in the Classical period comes from Athens. We know of 6th- and early-5th-century performance spaces in Sparta, Argos, Sicily, Athens, and the demes of Attica: although apart from Athens we do not know if narrative drama was performed there or if they were choral dance or ritual spaces. Apart from fragments of plays by Aeschylus possibly produced in Sicily, all of the extant plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, and Menander were intended for production in Athens. It is also likely that the fragments of the plays of other dramatists from this period were also intended for the Athenian theater, although they may have been re-performed elsewhere. As theater spread throughout the Hellenistic period we find much more material-culture evidence of drama, although less textual evidence. It is important to note that the Greek theater stagecraft developed rapidly and underwent a number of significant changes. The theater also changed architecturally from a temporary wooden stand overlooking a level dancing space (orchestra) at a sanctuary or in a marketplace to a large stone edifice capable of accommodating thousands of people. The texts of ancient plays have come down to us without stage directions. Scholars have attempted to reconstruct Greek theater production techniques from evidence derived from the plays themselves, the material-culture evidence of architectural remains of theater spaces, the iconography of vase painting and sculpture, epigraphic records, and later scholia and commentaries from Hellenistic, Roman, and medieval scholars. As a result there are many controversial issues such as the shape and size of the theater space, the use of scenery and scene painting (or not), the introduction of the scene building and the entrances, exits, and stage movements of the performers.


1995 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 173-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.A. Shapiro

The centerpiece of Oliver Taplin's recent monograph on Greek drama and South Italian vase-painting is an Apulian bell-krater of the early fourth century in a New York private collection (Plate IV). The vase belongs to the genre conventionally known as phlyax vases, though Taplin would reject that label, since it is the thesis of his book that many, if not most, of these vases reflect Athenian Old Comedy and not an indigenous Italic entertainment, the phlyax play.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 1482-1488
Author(s):  
Jennifer J. Thistle

Purpose Previous research with children with and without disabilities has demonstrated that visual–perceptual factors can influence the speech of locating a target on an array. Adults without disabilities often facilitate the learning and use of a child's augmentative and alternative communication system. The current research examined how the presence of symbol background color influenced the speed with which adults without disabilities located target line drawings in 2 studies. Method Both studies used a between-subjects design. In the 1st study, 30 adults (ages 18–29 years) located targets in a 16-symbol array. In the 2nd study, 30 adults (ages 18–34 years) located targets in a 60-symbol array. There were 3 conditions in each study: symbol background color, symbol background white with a black border, and symbol background white with a color border. Results In the 1st study, reaction times across groups were not significantly different. In the 2nd study, participants in the symbol background color condition were significantly faster than participants in the other conditions, and participants in the symbol background white with black border were significantly slower than participants in the other conditions. Conclusion Communication partners may benefit from the presence of background color, especially when supporting children using displays with many symbols.


Author(s):  
Robert J. Hartsuiker ◽  
Lies Notebaert

A picture naming experiment in Dutch tested whether disfluencies in speech can arise from difficulties in lexical access. Speakers described networks consisting of line drawings and paths connecting these drawings, and we manipulated picture name agreement. Consistent with our hypothesis, there were more pauses and more self-corrections in the low name agreement condition than the high name agreement condition, but there was no effect on repetitions. We also considered determiner frequency. There were more self-corrections and more repetitions when the picture name required the less frequent (neuter-gender) determiner “het” than the more frequent (common-gender) determiner “de”. These data suggest that difficulties in distinct stages of language production result in distinct patterns of disfluencies.


Author(s):  
Toby J. Lloyd-Jones ◽  
Juergen Gehrke ◽  
Jason Lauder

We assessed the importance of outline contour and individual features in mediating the recognition of animals by examining response times and eye movements in an animal-object decision task (i.e., deciding whether or not an object was an animal that may be encountered in real life). There were shorter latencies for animals as compared with nonanimals and performance was similar for shaded line drawings and silhouettes, suggesting that important information for recognition lies in the outline contour. The most salient information in the outline contour was around the head, followed by the lower torso and leg regions. We also observed effects of object orientation and argue that the usefulness of the head and lower torso/leg regions is consistent with a role for the object axis in recognition.


Acta Classica ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 60 (annual) ◽  
pp. 213-218
Author(s):  
Simon Perris ◽  
Keyword(s):  

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