The Music of Tragedy offers a new approach to the study of classical Greek theater by examining the use of musical language, imagery, and performance in the late work of Euripides. Naomi Weiss demonstrates that Euripides' allusions to music-making are not just metatheatrical flourishes or gestures towards musical and religious practices external to the drama but closely interwoven with the dramatic plot. Situating Euripides' experimentation with the dramaturgical effects of mousike within a broader cultural context, she shows how much of his novelty lies in his reinvention of traditional lyric styles and motifs for the tragic stage. If we wish to understand better the trajectories of this most important ancient art form, The Music of Tragedy argues, we must pay closer attention to the role played by both music and text.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"Weiss offers us a new way of seeing how choruses are central characters in Euripides' late plays, even when they seem at first glance far removed from what is going on around them. Her work is an excellent example of the current revolution in the study of ancient music, which is refuting definitively the facile assumption that tragedy's music in unknowable and therefore uninteresting." * Bryn Mawr Classical Review * "[This] work is highly valuable. It will add depth of understanding to those interested in Euripides and Greek tragedy, and the role of mousike in a variety of genres. It adds a new perspective on debate regarding the nature of the New music and provides extra dimension to the currently voguish focus on the role of the chorus. Most critically, it relocates the reader through time and space, allowing at least a glimpse of the immersive choral culture for which we are in want." -- Matthew Shipton * The Classical Review * "This outstanding book is the first entirely devoted to Euripidean music." * Greek and Roman Musical Studies * "An elegiac tone runs through NaomiWeiss' careful, learned, and compelling book, a subtle basso ostinato suggesting that Euripides' late tragedies can never be experienced as vividly or as urgently as they once were. I recommend her book both for its masterful display of scholarly skill and for this moving and provocative sense of loss." * Classical Philology * "As Weiss fills the silence of music lost with a symphony of images and sounds, Greek mousike emerges as a cognitively demanding and complex synaesthetic practice." * Theatre Journal *
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Produkt-Hinweis
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 28 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-520-29590-2 (9780520295902)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Naomi Weiss is Assistant Professor of Classics at Harvard University. She has published articles on tragedy, Pindar, and ancient Greek musical culture, and is coeditor of a volume on the genres of archaic and classical Greek lyric.
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Note on Editions and Translations
Introduction: In Search of Tragedy's Music
1. Words, Music, and Dance in Archaic Lyric and Classical Tragedy
Before Tragedy: Imaginative Suggestion in Archaic Choral Lyric
Metamusical Play in Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Early Euripides
2. Chorus, Character, and Plot in Electra
Electra and the Chorus
Performed Ecphrasis
Choral Anticipation and Enactment
3. Musical Absence in Trojan Women
The Paradox of Absent Choreia
New Songs and Past Performances
Performing the Fall of Troy
4. Protean Singers and the Shaping of Narrative in Helen
Birdsong and Lament
New Music
Travel and Epiphany
5. From Choreia to Monody in Iphigenia in Aulis
Spectatorship, Enactment, and Desire
Past and Present Mousike
Choreia and Monody
Conclusion: Euripides' Musical Innovations
Works Cited
General Index
Index Locorum