SPECIAL SEMINAR this week with visiting professor from the U.S.
Lecturer: Gonda Van Steen
Entry: FREE
Synopsis
Gonda Van Steen studies the treatment of Aristophanes' comedies in Greece of the past two centuries. Of course, the playwright is notorious for his bold political and sexual humor, which is why it took so much longer for his work (a total of eleven comedies) to be rediscovered in modern Greece.
While classical tragedy served the purposes of post-revolutionary nation-building, Aristophanes' comedies seemed to detract from that ideal. For decades, his plays were reduced to reading plays only; the first productions were not staged until 1868.
After that, however, and aided by the Demoticist movement, Aristophanes' comedies were rapidly rediscovered. By the early twentieth century his bold "women's plays" were all the rage.
By the 1930s, Karolos Koun was rediscovering Aristophanes' comedies with a small group of Athens College students. Among them was a later pioneer in Aristophanic productions, who staged his plays with the Greek National Theater from the mid-1950s on: Alexis Solomos.
Nobody foresaw the nation-wide scandal, though, that Koun's 1959 production of Aristophanes' Birds would cause. Setbacks and acts of censorship continued to affect the Greek revival of Aristophanes until the mid-1970s. Since then, however, "everything goes" and many theater companies have used (and at times abused) Aristophanes to launch themselves onto the active but very competitive Athenian theater scene.
Bio
Gonda Van Steen holds the Cassas Chair in Greek Studies at the University of Florida. She is the author of four books: Venom in Verse: Aristophanes in Modern Greece (2000); Liberating Hellenism from the Ottoman Empire (2010); Theatre of the Condemned: Classical Tragedy on Greek Prison Islands (2011); and Stage of Emergency: Theater and Public Performance under the Greek Military Dictatorship of 1967-1974 (2015).
Sponsors:
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We thank the seminars' corporate sponsors:
The Mezzanine floor (press "M" in the elevator) of Greek Centre Melbourne - located at the corner of Lonsdale and Russell streets in Melbourne, Australia.
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