Comic Authority in Aristophanes’ Knights

Polis 29 (1):130-149 (2012)
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Abstract

This article investigates the relationship between comic speech and political authority in democratic Athens through a reading of Aristophanes’ Knights. The article surveys three different interpretations of how Aristophanes constructs the authority of his comic persona in the play: he contrasts comic speech with rhetorical speech to illustrate the superiority of the former ; he reflexively reveals to the audience the potential deceptiveness of comic speech ; and he mocks his own claims to authority through the construction of a comically boastful persona. It is argued that the final two readings best capture the spirit of Aristophanic comedy, pointing to an affinity between the comic authority constructed by Aristophanes and the democratic conception of authority in operation in classical Athens.

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Tragedy and Trugedy.O. Taplin - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (02):331-.
Cleon and Pericles: a suggestion.Francis Cairns - 1982 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 102:203-204.

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