- and
orators competing for the po****r vote. The
resourceful hero: In
Aristophanic comedy, the hero is an independent-minded and self-reliant individual...
- are
suggestions that the
dance existed in
ancient Greece,
known as the
Aristophanic dance Cordax, even
though such
claims have yet to be confirmed. Furthermore...
- 1932 in a
small book
under the
title Sweeney Agonistes:
Fragments of an
Aristophanic Melodrama. The
scenes are
frequently performed together as a one-act...
- the
Nineteenth Century (Oxford
University Press, 2023). He co-edited
Aristophanic Humour:
Theory and
Practice (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020) with
Edith Hall...
-
University of St
Andrews from 1981 to 2005. A
scholar of Gr****
prose and
Aristophanic comedy, he was also the
author of Gr**** Homo****uality (1978), a key text...
-
Socratic behaviours later described more
sympathetically by Plato. The
Aristophanic Socrates is much more
interested in
physical speculations than is Plato's...
- Dillon,
Matthew (1995). "By Gods, Tongues, and Dogs: The Use of
Oaths in
Aristophanic Comedy".
Greece & Rome.
Second Series. 42 (2): 135–151. doi:10.1017/s0017383500025584...
-
October 2020 Olson, S.
Douglas (January 1992), "Names and
Naming in
Aristophanic Comedy", The
classical Quarterly, 42 (2), The
classical ****ociation:...
-
mutual regard. He
described The
Apple Cart to
Elgar as "a
scandalous Aristophanic burlesque of
democratic politics, with a
brief but
shocking **** interlude"...
- book}}: CS1 maint:
location missing publisher (link) Dover, K.J. (1972).
Aristophanic Comedy. London. p. 17.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint:
location missing publisher...