Book Cover

Reaching Athens: Community, Democracy and Other Mythologies in Adaptations of Greek Tragedy

Contributor(s): Mussgnug, Florian (Other), Laera, Margherita (Author)

ISBN: 9783034308076

Publisher: Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers

Binding Types:

$89.30
$102.25 (Final Price)
$101.05 (100+ copies: $100.30)
List/retail price:
$89.30
- +
Buy

Pub Date: January 4, 2013

Dewey: 813.54

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.80" H x 8.80" L x 5.90" W ( 1.05 lbs) 319 pages

Series: New Comparative Criticism

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book analyses discourses around community, democracy, origin and Western identity in stage adaptations of Greek tragedy. It addresses the ways in which theatre produces and perpetuates the myth of 'classical' Greece as the origin of Europe and how this narrative raises issues concerning the possibility of a transnational European community.

Review Quotes: Margherita Laera tackles a fundamental problem of our times: what do we do with our ancestors and with the myths of Greek tragedy and democracy? This is an ambitious project and an excellent piece of scholarship. (Patrice Pavis, Professor of Theatre Studies, Korea National University of the Arts)
This book articulates original, important and wide-ranging arguments with elegance and verve. A stimulating deconstruction of myth, in the Barthesian sense of that word. (Carl Lavery, Senior Lecturer in Drama, Theatre and Performance, Aberystwyth University)
Margherita Laera launches her complex and compelling study of recent adaptations into waters that, seemingly charted as 'the classical tradition', reveal themselves to be deep and churning Sargasso Seas of ideology, politics and mythology. [...] 'Reaching Athens' fills an important role as it explores areas that are often neglected or given short shrift [... and it] complicates the polemic in an extremely meaningful way [...] This invaluable work deserves a wide audience and should encourage further investigation of the ideological role of present-day adaptations and the ongoing mythologizing of ancient, selective affinities. (Norma Jenckes, Theatre Research International 40.1, 2015)

Product successfully added to cart!