Aristophanes: Difference between revisions

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* [[Greek Chorus]]
* [[Greek Chorus]]
* [[Hilarity Ensues]]: Duh
* [[Hilarity Ensues]]: Duh
* [[Have You Seen My God]]
* [[Have You Seen My God?]]
* [[Leaning On the Fourth Wall]]
* [[Leaning On the Fourth Wall]]
* [[Missing Episode]]: Not all his plays survived the fall of the Roman Empire.
* [[Missing Episode]]: Not all his plays survived the fall of the Roman Empire.

Revision as of 03:49, 9 January 2014

/wiki/Aristophanescreator
Brekekekéx-koáx-koáx
—The familiar chant from The Frogs

Aristophanes was an Athenian comic playwright (5th-4th century BC). His works are often characterized as Satire, which is quite remarkable--the Greeks never really went in for satire that much, to the point where they didn't even have a word for it (the genre was considered to be an innovation of the Romans, who were rather fonder of the style).

His notable plays include The Clouds (Νεφέλαι, Nephelai), which famously lampooned Socrates; The Wasps (Σφῆκες, Sphékes), a satire of contemporary litigious society; The Birds (Ὄρνιθες, Ornithes), which features the original Cloudcuckooland; Lysistrata (Λυσιστράτη), in which the women of Greece bring about the end of a war by going on a sex strike; and The Frogs (Βάτραχοι, Batrachoi), in which Euripides and Aeschylus contend in the afterlife for the title of Best Tragic Poet. (Many of his plays, in what was then a common convention, were named after the role adopted by the Greek Chorus; Lysistrata, named after the lead character, is the only exception out of those listed here.)

The Frogs was loosely adapted into a musical by Stephen Sondheim et al., with William Shakespeare and George Bernard Shaw as the contentious dramatists, and a much-expanded role for the frogs.


Trope Namer

Works by Aristophanes with their own trope pages include:


Other works by Aristophanes provide examples of: