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  1. Aristophanes’ Komödien als Lesetexte.Fabian Zogg - 2017 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 161 (1):1-18.
    Journal Name: Philologus Issue: Ahead of print.
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  • Lysistrata and female song.R. B. Rutherford - 2015 - Classical Quarterly 65 (1):60-68.
    Among the many points of interest in N.G. Wilson's admirable new text of Aristophanes is his handling of the closing scene ofLysistrata, and in particular the question of the heroine's role in that scene. In the new OCT we find the short speech 1273–8 ascribed to Lysistrata, while the apparatus notes ‘legato tribuunt quidam’. The song which follows is also given to Lysistrata, but the apparatus comments ‘quis canat incertum est.’ Finally Lysistrata is presumed to speak the single line 1295 (...)
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  • The Tragic Mask of Comedy: Metatheatricality in Menander.Kathryn Gutzwiller - 2000 - Classical Antiquity 19 (1):102-137.
    The plays of Menander have been largely absent from the recent critical attention given the metatheatrical aspects of ancient comedy because they avoid direct reference to performance and maintain dramatic illusion. But as readings of tragic self-reflexivity have shown, even consistently illusionistic drama can make reference to itself as drama so that the audience is encouraged to view the play in double focus, as both a pretense of reality and as an evident dramatic artifice. Metatheatricality in Menander has its basis (...)
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  • Containing Tragedy: Rhetoric and Self-Representation in Sophocles' "Philoctetes".Thomas M. Falkner - 1998 - Classical Antiquity 17 (1):25-58.
    This essay examines "Philoctetes" as an exercise in self-representation by looking at the self-referential and metatheatrical dimensions of the play. After suggesting an enlarged understanding of metatheater as "a particularly vigorous attempt to engage the audience at the synthetic and thematic levels of reading," I examine "Philoctetes" as a self-conscious discourse on tragedy, tragic production, and tragic experience, one which participates in a larger conversation in the late fifth century about the ethics of tragedy, including the remarks of Gorgias on (...)
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  • Evidence for and against audience-actor contact in Aristophanes.Jasper F. Donelan - 2015 - Classical Quarterly 65 (2):518-529.
    Unlike tragedy, Old Comedy openly acknowledges its own festival context and the existence of a world beyond the one created for and occupied by its masked characters. Admission of the theatrical setting is a standard well-documented feature and was an effective way of drawing spectators into the drama's fiction. To the same end, speaking directly to the audience formed an integral part of Aristophanes' plays and very probably of the comic genre as a whole. We can therefore think of comedy (...)
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  • Μετοιϰία in the "Supplices" of Aeschylus.Geoffrey W. Bakewell - 1997 - Classical Antiquity 16 (2):209-228.
    In Aeschylus' "Supplices" the Danaids flee their cousins and take refuge at Argos. Scholars have noted similarities between the Argos of the play and contemporary Athens. Yet one such correspondence has generally been overlooked: the Danaids are awarded sanctuary in terms reflecting mid fifth-century Athenian μετοιϰία, a process providing for the partial incorporation of non-citizens into polis life. Danaus and his daughters are of Argive ancestry and take up residence within the city, yet do not become citizens. Instead, they receive (...)
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  • Emociones cómicas: El Tractatus Coislinianus a la luz de la poética aristofánica.Claudia N. Fernández - 2006 - Circe de Clásicos y Modernos 10:137-156.
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