- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Hellenic Common argues that theatrical adaptations of Greek tragedy exemplify the functioning of a cosmopolitan cultural commonwealth.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Marc JonesCommon Enemy Volume 120,99 €
- Cleves KinkeadCommon Clay22,99 €
- James ShirleyJames Shirley - The Maid's Revenge: "Death calls ye to the crowd of common men"12,99 €
- Robert CordingCommon Life15,99 €
- Craig Pandil and WhitneyMeditations of a Common Man and His Extraordinary Daughter17,99 €
- Neelam NarayanCommon Life of a Common Woman13,99 €
- Wendy McGrathCommon Place Ecstasies12,99 €
-
-
-
Hellenic Common argues that theatrical adaptations of Greek tragedy exemplify the functioning of a cosmopolitan cultural commonwealth.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 174
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 275g
- ISBN-13: 9780367536480
- ISBN-10: 036753648X
- Artikelnr.: 67823717
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 174
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 275g
- ISBN-13: 9780367536480
- ISBN-10: 036753648X
- Artikelnr.: 67823717
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Phillip Zapkin is Assistant Teaching Professor of English at Pennsylvania State University, USA.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Buying Piraeus, Owning Greece
1.1 A Very Brief History of Neoliberalism
1.2 McTheatre: Neoliberalism on Stage
1.3 Adaptation, Theatre, and Resistance to Neoliberal Hegemony
1.4 The Cultural Commons
1.5 Chapter Summaries
1.6 Conclusion
1.7 Works Cited
Chapter I: Adaptation: Shared Cultural Myths
2.1 The Field of Adaptation
2.2 The Political Economy of Adaptation
2.3 Why the Greeks in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries?
2.4 Global Greeks?
2.5 Adaptation's Cosmopolitan Political Potential
2.6 Conclusion
2.7 Works Cited
Chapter II: Economic (Neo)Colonialism: Exploitation Makes Globalization Go
'Round
3.1 A Global Economy
3.2 Economic Anti-Colonialism: Protest in Femi Osofisan's Women of Owu
3.3 Art and Culture as Survival Tools
3.4 The God of Profit: Nation Building and Global Economics in Moira
Buffini's Welcome to Thebes
3.5 Violence and Disaster Capitalism
3.6 Politics of Disavowal: Neoliberal Rhetoric and Results
3.7 Conclusion
3.8 Works Cited
Chapter III: ...And Their Families: Neoliberal Family and the Dissolution
of the Social
4.1 Family and the Neoliberal Paradox
4.2 Competing Models of Family in Marina Carr's By the Bog of Cats
4.3 Contradictions to Neoliberal Ideals: Travellers and Domestic Labor
4.4 Breaking Down Society, Building Society Through Theatre
4.5 Conclusion
4.6 Works Cited
Chapter IV Korinthiazomai: Rewriting Desire and Perverse Enjoyment
5.1 The Psychology of Neoliberalism
5.2 New Plays from Old Fragments
5.3 Commodified Society: Sex, Religion, and Family
5.4 Alcmaeon's Symptom
5.5 Creon's Obsession
5.6 God from the Law
5.7 Conclusion
5.8 Works Cited
Chapter V Ubuntu: Building a Common World
6.1 Cosmopolitan Ethics
6.2 Molora and Its Classical Intertexts
6.3 Molora and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
6.4 African Languages and Performance Forms
6.5 The Humane Power of the Xhosa Chorus
6.6 Conclusion
6.7 Works Cited
Conclusion Buying Greece: Or, You Get What You Pay For
7.1 Theatre Takes on Culture
7.2 Theatre Takes on Capitalism
7.3 Works Cited
Introduction: Buying Piraeus, Owning Greece
1.1 A Very Brief History of Neoliberalism
1.2 McTheatre: Neoliberalism on Stage
1.3 Adaptation, Theatre, and Resistance to Neoliberal Hegemony
1.4 The Cultural Commons
1.5 Chapter Summaries
1.6 Conclusion
1.7 Works Cited
Chapter I: Adaptation: Shared Cultural Myths
2.1 The Field of Adaptation
2.2 The Political Economy of Adaptation
2.3 Why the Greeks in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries?
2.4 Global Greeks?
2.5 Adaptation's Cosmopolitan Political Potential
2.6 Conclusion
2.7 Works Cited
Chapter II: Economic (Neo)Colonialism: Exploitation Makes Globalization Go
'Round
3.1 A Global Economy
3.2 Economic Anti-Colonialism: Protest in Femi Osofisan's Women of Owu
3.3 Art and Culture as Survival Tools
3.4 The God of Profit: Nation Building and Global Economics in Moira
Buffini's Welcome to Thebes
3.5 Violence and Disaster Capitalism
3.6 Politics of Disavowal: Neoliberal Rhetoric and Results
3.7 Conclusion
3.8 Works Cited
Chapter III: ...And Their Families: Neoliberal Family and the Dissolution
of the Social
4.1 Family and the Neoliberal Paradox
4.2 Competing Models of Family in Marina Carr's By the Bog of Cats
4.3 Contradictions to Neoliberal Ideals: Travellers and Domestic Labor
4.4 Breaking Down Society, Building Society Through Theatre
4.5 Conclusion
4.6 Works Cited
Chapter IV Korinthiazomai: Rewriting Desire and Perverse Enjoyment
5.1 The Psychology of Neoliberalism
5.2 New Plays from Old Fragments
5.3 Commodified Society: Sex, Religion, and Family
5.4 Alcmaeon's Symptom
5.5 Creon's Obsession
5.6 God from the Law
5.7 Conclusion
5.8 Works Cited
Chapter V Ubuntu: Building a Common World
6.1 Cosmopolitan Ethics
6.2 Molora and Its Classical Intertexts
6.3 Molora and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
6.4 African Languages and Performance Forms
6.5 The Humane Power of the Xhosa Chorus
6.6 Conclusion
6.7 Works Cited
Conclusion Buying Greece: Or, You Get What You Pay For
7.1 Theatre Takes on Culture
7.2 Theatre Takes on Capitalism
7.3 Works Cited
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Buying Piraeus, Owning Greece
1.1 A Very Brief History of Neoliberalism
1.2 McTheatre: Neoliberalism on Stage
1.3 Adaptation, Theatre, and Resistance to Neoliberal Hegemony
1.4 The Cultural Commons
1.5 Chapter Summaries
1.6 Conclusion
1.7 Works Cited
Chapter I: Adaptation: Shared Cultural Myths
2.1 The Field of Adaptation
2.2 The Political Economy of Adaptation
2.3 Why the Greeks in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries?
2.4 Global Greeks?
2.5 Adaptation's Cosmopolitan Political Potential
2.6 Conclusion
2.7 Works Cited
Chapter II: Economic (Neo)Colonialism: Exploitation Makes Globalization Go
'Round
3.1 A Global Economy
3.2 Economic Anti-Colonialism: Protest in Femi Osofisan's Women of Owu
3.3 Art and Culture as Survival Tools
3.4 The God of Profit: Nation Building and Global Economics in Moira
Buffini's Welcome to Thebes
3.5 Violence and Disaster Capitalism
3.6 Politics of Disavowal: Neoliberal Rhetoric and Results
3.7 Conclusion
3.8 Works Cited
Chapter III: ...And Their Families: Neoliberal Family and the Dissolution
of the Social
4.1 Family and the Neoliberal Paradox
4.2 Competing Models of Family in Marina Carr's By the Bog of Cats
4.3 Contradictions to Neoliberal Ideals: Travellers and Domestic Labor
4.4 Breaking Down Society, Building Society Through Theatre
4.5 Conclusion
4.6 Works Cited
Chapter IV Korinthiazomai: Rewriting Desire and Perverse Enjoyment
5.1 The Psychology of Neoliberalism
5.2 New Plays from Old Fragments
5.3 Commodified Society: Sex, Religion, and Family
5.4 Alcmaeon's Symptom
5.5 Creon's Obsession
5.6 God from the Law
5.7 Conclusion
5.8 Works Cited
Chapter V Ubuntu: Building a Common World
6.1 Cosmopolitan Ethics
6.2 Molora and Its Classical Intertexts
6.3 Molora and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
6.4 African Languages and Performance Forms
6.5 The Humane Power of the Xhosa Chorus
6.6 Conclusion
6.7 Works Cited
Conclusion Buying Greece: Or, You Get What You Pay For
7.1 Theatre Takes on Culture
7.2 Theatre Takes on Capitalism
7.3 Works Cited
Introduction: Buying Piraeus, Owning Greece
1.1 A Very Brief History of Neoliberalism
1.2 McTheatre: Neoliberalism on Stage
1.3 Adaptation, Theatre, and Resistance to Neoliberal Hegemony
1.4 The Cultural Commons
1.5 Chapter Summaries
1.6 Conclusion
1.7 Works Cited
Chapter I: Adaptation: Shared Cultural Myths
2.1 The Field of Adaptation
2.2 The Political Economy of Adaptation
2.3 Why the Greeks in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries?
2.4 Global Greeks?
2.5 Adaptation's Cosmopolitan Political Potential
2.6 Conclusion
2.7 Works Cited
Chapter II: Economic (Neo)Colonialism: Exploitation Makes Globalization Go
'Round
3.1 A Global Economy
3.2 Economic Anti-Colonialism: Protest in Femi Osofisan's Women of Owu
3.3 Art and Culture as Survival Tools
3.4 The God of Profit: Nation Building and Global Economics in Moira
Buffini's Welcome to Thebes
3.5 Violence and Disaster Capitalism
3.6 Politics of Disavowal: Neoliberal Rhetoric and Results
3.7 Conclusion
3.8 Works Cited
Chapter III: ...And Their Families: Neoliberal Family and the Dissolution
of the Social
4.1 Family and the Neoliberal Paradox
4.2 Competing Models of Family in Marina Carr's By the Bog of Cats
4.3 Contradictions to Neoliberal Ideals: Travellers and Domestic Labor
4.4 Breaking Down Society, Building Society Through Theatre
4.5 Conclusion
4.6 Works Cited
Chapter IV Korinthiazomai: Rewriting Desire and Perverse Enjoyment
5.1 The Psychology of Neoliberalism
5.2 New Plays from Old Fragments
5.3 Commodified Society: Sex, Religion, and Family
5.4 Alcmaeon's Symptom
5.5 Creon's Obsession
5.6 God from the Law
5.7 Conclusion
5.8 Works Cited
Chapter V Ubuntu: Building a Common World
6.1 Cosmopolitan Ethics
6.2 Molora and Its Classical Intertexts
6.3 Molora and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
6.4 African Languages and Performance Forms
6.5 The Humane Power of the Xhosa Chorus
6.6 Conclusion
6.7 Works Cited
Conclusion Buying Greece: Or, You Get What You Pay For
7.1 Theatre Takes on Culture
7.2 Theatre Takes on Capitalism
7.3 Works Cited