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Barbarian Play

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Barbarian Play Synopsis

In this volume William S. Anderson sets Plautus, who wrote Rome's earliest surviving poetry, in his rightful place among the Greek and Roman writers of what we know as New Comedy (fourth to second centuries).

Anderson begins by defining major innovations that Plautus made on inherited Greek New Comedy (Menander, Philemon, and Diphilus), transforming it from romantic domestic drama to a celebration of rollicking family anarchy. He shows how Plautus diminished the traditional importance of love and replaced it with a new major theme: 'heroic badness,' especially embodied in the rogue slave (ancestor of the impudent servant, valet, or maid). Anderson then examines the unique verbal texture of Plautus' drama and demonstrates his revolt against realism, his drive to have his characters defy everyday circumstances and pit their intrepid linguistic wit against social order, their Roman extravagant impudence against Greek self-control.

Finally, Anderson explores the special form of metatheatre that we admire in Plautus, by which he undermines the assumptions of his Greek 'models' and replaces them with a new, confident Roman comedy.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780802079411
Publication date: 16th October 1996
Author: William S Anderson
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 184 pages
Series: The Robson Classical Lectures
Genres: Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Literary studies: plays and playwrights
Ancient history
European history
Classic and pre-20th century plays
Ancient, classical and medieval texts