This monograph adapts terms and concepts from linguistics, structuralism and semiotics to develop a grammar for the ten extant, complete dramas from first-century Rome and five Humanist plays from Renaissance Italy. In a language, letters combine to form words, which create sentences, paragraphs and so on. This book posits that there is a similar structure to dramatic texts, and explores the way basic elements (i.e., performers, roles, the stage, actions, mental states and effects) combine into figures and stage business, which then form scenes, acts and plays. The study uncovers patterns within the structure, as well as changes in these patterns, which reveal insights into, not what story the playwright is telling, but how he goes about telling it.
Much of this work depends upon the methods and results of The Dramaturgy of Senecan Tragedy (Ann Arbor: 2013), which sought out elements of stagecraft and poetics in the plays attributed to Lucius Annaeus Seneca. A series of appendices apply these same methods to the pseudo-Senecan Hercules Oetaeus and Octavia, as well as the plays composed in the Tre- and Quattrocento.
Thomas D. Kohn, (PhD, University of Minnesota, 2001) is Associate Professor of Classics, Greek and Latin at Wayne State University. He has published articles on Senecan tragedy, ancient theatre and Roman poetry, as well as The Dramaturgy of Senecan Tragedy (UMich, 2013).
Preface List of Tables and Diagrams
1 General Introduction
âAâThe Basics
âBâPerformance
âCâHow to Read Ancient and Renaissance Playscripts
2 A Grammar for Senecan Drama
âAâIntroduction
âBâPhonemes
âCâMorphemes
âDâSemantamemes
âEâActamemes
âFâDramamemes
âGâBeyond Dramamemes (Corporamemes??)
3 A Grammar for Post-Senecan Drama of the First Century CE
âAâIntroduction
âBâHercules Oetaeus
âCâOctavia
âDâCorporamemes
4 A Grammar for Neo-Latin Drama
âAâIntroduction
âBâPhonemes
âCâMorphemes
âDâSemantamemes, Actamemes and Dramamemes
âEâCorporamemes
Postscript
Appendix A: Hercules Oetaeus and the Histriones
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix B: Octavia in the Orchestra
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix C: Ecerinis and the Exostra
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix D: Achiles and the Audience
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix E: Progne on the Proscenium
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix F: Hyempsal as Historical Drama
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix G: Fernandus Servatus and the Scaenae Frons
âAâIntroduction
âBâThe Structure, Persona Distribution and Settings
âCâDramaturgical Issues
Appendix H: Mask Assignments for Roman Drama Appendix I: Meters of Neo-Latin Choral Passages Works Cited Index
Students (advanced undergrad and post-graduate) and scholars of ancient theatre as well as theatre practioners, academic institutions, and university libraries. Keywords: Lucius (L.) Annaeus Seneca; ancient tragedy; historical drama; fabulae praetextae; Albertino Mussato; Ecerinis; Antonio Loschi; Achilles (Achiles); Gregorio Correr; Procne (Progne); Leonardo Dati; Hiempsal (Hyempsal); Marcelinno Verardi; Ferdinand Preserved; Hercules Oetaus; Octavia; Renaissance drama; Tre- and Quattrocento; Agamemenon; Oedipus; Phaedra; Medea; Hercules Furens (Mad Hercules); Trojan Women (Troades); Phoenician Women (Phoenissae); Thyestes.