Gratis Versand in ganz Deutschland
Bookbot

Anna A. Novokhatko

    Greek comedy and embodied scholarly discourse
    A Guide to Classics and Cognitive Studies
    • 2024

      A Guide to Classics and Cognitive Studies

      Reviewing findings and results

      • 220 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden

      The book explores the intersection of Classics and Cognitive studies, highlighting significant research developments over recent decades. It presents four key areas: cognitive materiality and agency, the spatial turn in cognition, imaginative perception, and the sensory turn in ancient experiences. Additionally, it features interviews with prominent scholars who have shaped the study of emotions in antiquity, enriching the dialogue between these fields. This comprehensive overview aims to synthesize diverse perspectives within classical studies and cognitive research.

      A Guide to Classics and Cognitive Studies
    • 2023

      Comedy created a joyful mode of perceiving rhetoric, grammar, and literary criticism through the somatic senses of the author, the characters, the actors and the spectators. This was due to generic peculiarities including the omnivore mirroring of contemporary (scholarly) ideas, the materiality of costumes and masks, and the embodiment of abstract notions on stage, in short due to the correspondence between body, language and environment. The materiality of words, letters and syllables in ancient grammar and stylistic criticism is related to the embodied criticism found in Greek comedy. How are scholarly discourses embodied? The act of writing is vividly enacted on stage through carving with effort the shape of the letter 'rho' and commenting emotionally on it. The letters of the alphabet are danced by the chorus, the cognitive and communicative power of gestures and body expression providing emotional context. A barking pickle brine from Thasos is perhaps an olfactory somatosensory visual and auditory embodiment of Archilochean poetry, whilst the actor’s foot in dance is a visual and motor embodiment of a metrical foot on stage. Comedy with its actors, costumes, masks, and props is overflowing with such examples. In this book, the author suggests that comedy made a significant contribution to the establishment of scholarly discourses in Classical Greece.

      Greek comedy and embodied scholarly discourse