GREEK DRAMA AND FEMALE PROTAGONISTS - (H.M.) Roisman Tragic Heroines in Ancient Greek Drama. Pp. x + 314, map. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. Paper, £24.99, US$34.95 (Cased, £75, US$100). ISBN: 978-1-350-10399-3 (978-1-350-10398-6 hbk).

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Ariadne Konstantinou
Author(s):  
Mariane Farias de Oliveira

Tradução do artigo "Eudemian Ethical Method", de Lawrence Jost, publicado originalmente em Essays in Ancient Greek Philosophy IV: Aristotle's Ethics edited by John P. Anton and Anthony Preus, the State University of New York Press ©1991, State University of New York. A tradução foi feita sob supervisão do orientador prof. Dr. José Lourenço Pereira da Silva (UFSM).


Author(s):  
Lucy C. M. M. Jackson

As well as bringing together all the relevant evidence for the quality and activity of the chorus of drama in the fourth century, this monograph has raised certain key questions about the current understanding of the nature and development of Attic drama as a whole. First, it shows that the supposed ‘civic’ quality of the chorus of drama is, in fact, an association loaned, inappropriately, from the genre of circular, ‘dithyrambic’, choral performance. Being attentive to the cultural differences between these two genres should prompt a further re-evaluation of how to read dramatic choruses more generally. Second, the way in which key fourth-century authors such as Plato and Xenophon use the image of the chorus to discuss the concept of leadership has profoundly shaped ways of construing choreia in ancient Greek drama, and the ancient Mediterranean more generally. Armed with this knowledge, it is possible to retell the story and history of the chorus in drama.


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