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Index of Authors and Quoted Passages
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents VII
- Abbreviations IX
- List of Figures XI
- Introduction XIII
-
Part I: Background, Origins, and the Lost Theatre: Cults, Contests, Institutions
- Dionysian Rituals in Archaic Athens: The Contribution of Images 1
- What Song the Kômos Sang 15
- Creating a Context for the Athenian Invention of Drama 43
- Archaeological Evidence for the Beginning of the Dionysia in Athens: The Tympanon Relief NAM 3131 57
- Protean Satyrs and Silens: Early Greek Satyr Play-Performances and their Adoption in Athenian Dionysian Imagery 65
- Dithyramb on Paros, Komoi in Athens: Insights from the Epigraphic Evidence for the Start of Choral Competitions at the Athenian Dionysia 101
-
Part II: Dionysian Performances: The Athenian Fifth Century
- The Fourth Unknown: The Attic Dithyramb 137
- Pindar and Tragedy: A Fresh Look at Dochmiac in Choral Lyric 149
- Developments and Discontinuities in Tragedy Forms, 458–405 BCE 177
- Ancient and Modern Linguistic Approaches to the History of Attic Comedy 195
- Joy and Tears in Situ: The Perception of Theatre in Early Greek Sources 217
-
Part III: Reconstruction of the Past: Post-Classical Views of the Attic Theatre
- On History and the History of Tragedy According to Aristotle 237
- Phanodemus and the Invention of the Dionysian Chorus 257
- Menander and the Citation of Tragedy 301
- Daphnis or Lityerses? Pastoral and Satyrical Rusticities 319
- Imagining the Origins of Drama: Greek Epigram and the Satyrs of Sikyon 335
- Bibliography 355
- List of Contributors 383
- Index of Names 387
- Index of Authors and Quoted Passages 395
- Index of Inscriptions 421
- Concordance to Vase Publications 423
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents VII
- Abbreviations IX
- List of Figures XI
- Introduction XIII
-
Part I: Background, Origins, and the Lost Theatre: Cults, Contests, Institutions
- Dionysian Rituals in Archaic Athens: The Contribution of Images 1
- What Song the Kômos Sang 15
- Creating a Context for the Athenian Invention of Drama 43
- Archaeological Evidence for the Beginning of the Dionysia in Athens: The Tympanon Relief NAM 3131 57
- Protean Satyrs and Silens: Early Greek Satyr Play-Performances and their Adoption in Athenian Dionysian Imagery 65
- Dithyramb on Paros, Komoi in Athens: Insights from the Epigraphic Evidence for the Start of Choral Competitions at the Athenian Dionysia 101
-
Part II: Dionysian Performances: The Athenian Fifth Century
- The Fourth Unknown: The Attic Dithyramb 137
- Pindar and Tragedy: A Fresh Look at Dochmiac in Choral Lyric 149
- Developments and Discontinuities in Tragedy Forms, 458–405 BCE 177
- Ancient and Modern Linguistic Approaches to the History of Attic Comedy 195
- Joy and Tears in Situ: The Perception of Theatre in Early Greek Sources 217
-
Part III: Reconstruction of the Past: Post-Classical Views of the Attic Theatre
- On History and the History of Tragedy According to Aristotle 237
- Phanodemus and the Invention of the Dionysian Chorus 257
- Menander and the Citation of Tragedy 301
- Daphnis or Lityerses? Pastoral and Satyrical Rusticities 319
- Imagining the Origins of Drama: Greek Epigram and the Satyrs of Sikyon 335
- Bibliography 355
- List of Contributors 383
- Index of Names 387
- Index of Authors and Quoted Passages 395
- Index of Inscriptions 421
- Concordance to Vase Publications 423