39 research outputs found

    Social Class

    Get PDF
    Discussion of class structure in fifth-century Athens, historical constitution of theater audiences, and the changes in the comic representation of class antagonism from Aristophanes to Menander

    Girls Playing Persephone (in Marriage and Death)

    Get PDF
    Arguably, the most famous myth told about Persephone is her abduction and marriage to Hades. The story clearly articulates the strong connection between marriage and death, and this episode became significant in both literature and religious practice in the wider classical Greek world. Reference to the story of Persephone’s abduction came to be used as a shorthand for evoking this connection, particularly in myth. This paper discusses two particular ways that Persephone’s narrative was used in marriage and death. I examine the pre-marriage offerings to Persephone at Lokroi, in southern Italy, and the tradition of Athenian girls who died unmarried being buried as brides. These cultic instances frame a discussion of Brides of Hades, particularly in tragedy. Overall, I conclude that these girls do not attempt to replace Persephone, but rather to imitate her: the ‘play the role’ of Persephone at various stages of her own abduction and marriage story

    The language(s) of comedy

    Get PDF
    corecore