Introduction. Ancient Comedy: The Longue Durée
Part One: Greek Comedy
I. Beginnings
1. In Search of the Essence of Old Comedy: From Aristotle's Poetics
to Zielinksi, Cornford and Beyond (Jeffrey Rusten)
2. Performing Comedy in the Fifth through Early Third Centuries
(Eric Csapo)
3. Dionysiac Festivals in Athens and the Financing of Comic
Performances: Choregia and Democracy (Andronike Makres)
II. The Greek Comedians and their Plays
4. The First Poets of Old Comedy (Ian Storey)
5. The Last Laugh: Eupolis, Strattis, and Plato against
Aristophanes (Mario Telò)
6. Aristophanes (Bernard Zimmermann)
7. Comedy in the Fourth Century I: Mythological Burlesques (Ioannis
M. Konstantakos)
8. Comedy in the Fourth Century II: Politics and Domesticity
(Jeffrey Henderson)
9. Comedy in the Late Fourth and Early Third Centuries BCE (Adele
C. Scafuro)
10. Menander (Adele C. Scafuro)
11. Reconstructing Menander (Alain Blanchard)
12. Crossing Genres: Comedy, Tragedy, and Satyr Play (Johanna
Hanink)
13. Crossing Conceptual Worlds: Greek Comedy and Philosophy (David
Konstan)
III. Attic Comedy and Society
14. The Politics of Comic Athens (David Rosenbloom)
15. Law and Greek Comedy (Emiliano J. Buis)
16. Religion and the Gods in Greek Comedy (Scott Scullion)
IV. The Diffusion of Comedy in the Hellenistic World
17. The Diffusion of Comedy from the Age of Alexander to the
Beginning of the Roman Empire (Brigitte Le Guen)
18. Hellenistic Mime and its Reception in Rome (Costas
Panayotakis)
Part Two: Roman Comedy
I. Beginnings
19. The Beginnings of Roman Comedy (Peter Brown)
20. Festivals, Producers, Theatrical Spaces, and Records (George
Fredric Franko)
21. Plautus between Greek Comedy and Atellan Farce: Assessments and
Reassessments (Antonis K. Petrides)
II. The Roman Comedians and their Plays
22. Plautus' Dramatic Predecessors and Contemporaries in Rome
(Wolfgang David Cirilo De Melo)
23. Plautus and Terence in Performance (Erica M. Bexley)
24. Metrics and Music (Marcus Deufert)
25. Prologue(s) and Prologi (Boris Dunsch)
26. Between Two Paradigms: Plautus (Michael Fontaine)
27. The Terentian Reformation: From Menander to Alexandria (Michael
Fontaine)
28. The Language of the Palliata (Evangelos Karakasis)
29. Tragedy, Para-tragedy and Roman Comedy (Gesine Manuwald)
III. Roman Comedy and Society
30. Roman Comedy and the Social Scene (Erich Gruen)
31. Law and Roman Comedy (Jan Felix Gaertner)
32. Religion in Roman Comedy (Boris Dunsch)
Part Three: Transmission and Ancient Reception
33. 'Introduction' to Aristophanea (Nigel Wilson)
34. Later Greek Comedy in Later Antiquity (Heinz-Günther
Nesselrath)
35. The Rebirth of a Codex: Virtual Work on the Ambrosian
Palimpsest of Plautus (Walter Stockert)
36. The Transmission of Terence (Benjamin Victor)
37. Graphic Comedy: Menandrian Mosaics and Terentian Miniatures
(Sebastiana Nervegna)
38. Greek Comedy, the Novel, and Epistolography (Regina
Höschele)
39. Roman Comedy in the Second Sophistic (Regine May)
40. The Reception of Plautus in Antiquity (Rolando Ferri)
41. Aelius Donatus and His Commentary on Terence's Comedies
(Chrysanthi Demetriou)
Appendices
1. New Texts: Greek Comic Papyri 1973-2012 (Eftychia
Bathrellou)
2. Post-Menandrian Comic Poets: An Overview of the Evidence and a
Checklist (Ben Millis)
Michael Fontaine is Associate Professor of Classics and Associate
Dean of the Faculty at Cornell University. He has published widely
on Latin literature, especially Roman Comedy, and is the author of
Funny Words in Plautine Comedy (Oxford University Press 2010).
Adele C. Scafuro is Professor of Classics at Brown University. She
has published numerous essays on Greek law, epigraphy, and drama,
and is the author of The Forensic Stage. Settling Disputes in
Graeco-Roman New Comedy (CUP 1997) and most recently, a
translation, Demosthenes. Speeches 39-49 (U. of Texas 2011).
"This is a massive tome which is not a page too long. The editors'
breadth of vision is engrossing and exhilarating, yet they have
also taken great pains to allow readers to pursue their own
detailed lines of inquiry. For any school or other library it
represents a small investment which will offer a disproportionate
return." -- Christopher Tanfield, Classics for All
"Fontaine (Cornell) and Scafuro (Brown) have created a handbook
that is a model of its kind and a mine of information. The essays,
written by experts from many countries besides the US and UK, cover
all the central topics of ancient comedy, and in a way that makes
the volume a true handbook. Readers will appreciate this volume for
its clear guidance and abundant information on (among other topics)
meter, performance, individual dramatists, the historical
development of ancient comedy, the role of comedy in ancient
society, and Greek comic papyri discovered in the last 40 years...
Highly recommended." --Choice
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