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Exploring persistent connections between absolute rulers and dramatic performance in Greek and Roman drama and history, Anne Duncan offers the reader a comprehensive insight into the juxtaposition between tyranny and theater in the Greco-Roman world. From the mad kings of Greek and Roman tragedy to the relationships that Greek tyrants and Roman emperors cultivated with actors and playwrights, absolute power has had an inescapably theatricalising effect on ruler and regime.Traversing various Greco-Roman playwrights, such as Euripides, Sophocles and Seneca, this book analyses the dangerous, unstable tyrants of ancient tragedy alongside the dangerous, unstable tyrants of ancient historiography in order to map out the ancient world’s discourses about the allure and peril of absolute power. Duncan argues that, while any kind of political display has theatrical qualities, it is tyranny that has an especially theatrical mode. Her conclusion is that tyrants and playwrights began to influence each other over the course of Greco-Roman antiquity, so that tragedy tyrants began to resemble real rulers, and real rulers began to style themselves after tragedy tyrants, each trying to tap into the other’s power to command audiences.
Anne Duncan is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, US. She is author of Performance and Identity in the Classical World (2006).
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Naïve Spectators: Barbarian Kings in Greek Tragedy2. Writing for Tyrants: Athenian Playwrights at Court3. "Transformed from a Man to a Wolf": Stock Tyrants in Greek Tragedy4. The Tyrant Tragedian: Dionysius I of Syracuse5. Alexander’s Divine Performances6. Seeing Monsters: Mad Kings in Greek and Roman Tragedy7. Atreus and Thyestes: Icons of Misrule8. The Julio-Claudian Emperors: Unmasking a Dynasty9. Tragic History: the OctaviaBibliographyIndex LocorumGeneral Index
The strength of the argument in Tyranny and Theatre encourages many new lines of enquiry and makes the book a particularly valuable contribution to both our understanding of theatre and theatrical culture in the ancient world, as well as the relationship between spectacle and political power in various Greco-Roman settings.