
Paracomedy: Appropriations Of Comedy In Greek Drama Is The First Book That Examines How Ancient Greek Tragedy Engages With The Genre Of Comedy. While Scholars Frequently Study Paratragedy (how Greek Comedians Satirize Tragedy), This Book Investigates The Previously Overlooked Practice Of Paracomedy: How Greek Tragedians Regularly Appropriate Elements From Comedy Such As Costumes, Scenes, Language, Characters, Or Plots. Drawing Upon A Wide Variety Of Complete And Fragmentary Tragedies And Comedies (aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Rhinthon), This Monograph Demonstrates That Paracomedy Was A Prominent Feature Of Greek Tragedy. Blending A Variety Of Interdisciplinary Approaches Including Traditional Philology, Literary Criticism, Genre Theory, And Performance Studies, This Book Offers Innovative Close Readings And Incisive Interpretations Of Individual Plays. Jendza Presents Paracomedy As A Multivalent Authorial Strategy: Some Instances Impart A Sense Of Ugliness Or Discomfort; Others Provide A Sense Of Light-heartedness Or Humor. While The Book Traces The Development Of Paracomedy Over Several Hundred Years, It Focuses On A Handful Of Euripidean Tragedies At The End Of The Fifth Century Bce. Jendza Argues That Euripides Was Participating In A Rivalry With The Comedian Aristophanes And Often Used Paracomedy To Demonstrate The Poetic Supremacy Of Tragedy; Indeed, Some Of Euripides' Most Complex Uses Of Paracomedy Attempt To Re-appropriate Aristophanes' Mockery Of His Theatrical Techniques. Paracomedy: Appropriations Of Comedy In Greek Tragedy Theorizes A New, Ground-breaking Relationship Between Greek Tragedy And Comedy That Not Only Redefines Our Understanding Of The Genre Of Tragedy, But Also Reveals A Dynamic Theatrical World Filled With Mutual Cross-generic Influence--
This book investigates the previously overlooked practice of paracomedy, examining how ancient Greek tragedians incorporated elements of comedy into their works. Craig Jendza, a scholar of classical literature, utilizes a combination of traditional philology, performance studies, and genre theory to analyze this cross-generic influence. He argues that tragedians, particularly Euripides, employed these comedic appropriations as a deliberate authorial strategy to navigate theatrical rivalries and assert the supremacy of tragedy.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Greek theatrical dynamics and genre interaction. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for specialists in classical philology and performance history.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Usa
ISBN-10:
0190090960
ISBN-13:
9780190090968
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