Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece

Andromache Karanika author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:15th Oct '24

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece cover

Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece traces the wedding song tradition, its imagery, and its tropes as a genre that became crystallized throughout the ages. It explores how wedding poetics permeates ancient Greek literature. It first analyzes how explicit or implicit matrimonial references shape archaic epic diction and become an integral part of epic discourse; orally circulating texts, such as wedding songs, could have a life of their own but, beyond their original context, could also become an integral part of a different genre, especially epic and drama. This author discusses the multiple platforms that enrich the wedding song tradition, including children's songs, hymns, paeans, and ululations, arguing for a combination of ritualized discourse with ludic childhood poetics. With an approach from cognitive and trauma studies, such references can be more revealing of the female experience than previously acknowledged. This book resists the idea that a wedding constitutes an initiation ritual, arguing that what on the surface may seem like a transition to a new phase reveals other underlying trends that work against the concept of a passage. It further considers how emotion is staged and revisits the poetics of return by looking at patterns such as the eloping, returning, failed, and dead bride. Finally, the theme of separation and return as an exemplification of a distinct female nostos is revisited in female-authored poetry, which helps us decode the complex interweaving of wedding performances and lamentation, among other types of performance.

In Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece, Andromache Karanika, inspired by extensive research on lament as a genre shaped by women's speech, sets out "to uncover the poetics of nuptial performances and how they shaped ancient Greek literature". The book admirably accomplishes this goal, complicating and diversifying our understanding of the experiences and social functions of a Greek wedding through a wide-ranging study of (ancient and modern) Greek literature alongside studies of specific examples of nuptial iconography. * Florencia Foxley, Bryn Mawr Classical Review *

ISBN: 9780198884576

Dimensions: 240mm x 160mm x 22mm

Weight: 674g

304 pages