[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Reconsidering Popular Comedy
Fri Jun 21 21:47:31 GMT 2013
Reconsidering Popular Comedy, Ancient and Modern
Wednesday 28–Friday 30 August
Western Infirmary Lecture Theatre, University of Glasgow
The comic theatre of Greece and Rome, like that of many other crucial
periods
of comic history (e.g. Elizabethan and Jacobean drama; music hall;
vaudeville)
is often described as popular comedy. This conference aims to
investigate the
extent, limits and utility of considering comic drama to be "popular".
How far
does performance in front of a mass audience shape the form and language of
comedy? How genuinely "popular" are different comic traditions? To what
extent
and in what ways do "elite" and "popular" interact in the original and
subsequent contexts of reception? Is "popular comedy" a useful term or
is it
subsuming other more challenging concepts (such as, for example, class)?
And
to what extent can parallel themes in the production and reception of
popular
comedy be seen across cultures and media?
The conference begins with the comic traditions of Greece and Rome, but
broadens out the question to consider popular comedy in other periods,
modes
and languages.
Speakers include: Peter Brown (Trinity, Oxford), Peter Kruschwitz
(Reading),
Amy Richlin (UCLA), James Robson (Open), Ralph Rosen (Penn), Alan
Sommerstein
(Nottingham), Peter Wiseman (Exeter). A full timetable is given below.
For the full conference website, including registration forms, go to:
http://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/humanities/research/classicsresearch/popularcomedyconference/
If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact the organisers:
Costas Panayotakis ((costas.panayotakis /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)) and Ian Ruffell
((ian.ruffell /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)).
Thanks,
Ian
---
Provisional programme
Wednesday 28 August 2013
9-10 Registration
10.00-10.10 Welcome
10.10-10.50 Session 1 - Introducing Popular Comedy:
Ralph Rosen (Penn), Aesthetics, taste and the question of 'popular'
comedy in
Classical Athens
10.50-11.20 COFFEE
11.20-12.40 Session 2 - Aristophanes:
11,20-12.00 James Robson (Open University), Humouring the masses: the highs
and lows of Aristophanic comedy
12.00-12.40 Sarah Miles (Durham University), Paratragedy and popular comic
drama
12.40-14.00 LUNCH
14.00-15.20 Parallel sessions:
Session 3 - Menander:
14.00-14.40 Giorgios Kazantzidis (Oxford), Doctors in a comic costume:
medical
language and mass audience in the comedy of Menander
14.40-15.20 Valeria Cinaglia (KCL), ‘Menander and popular ethics’
15.20-16.00 Stavroula Kiritsi (RHUL), “Menander’s new adventure”: an
adaptation of Dyskolos for the modern Greek audience
Session 4 - Comic Drama and Beyond:
14.00-14.40 Andrea Capra (Milan), A star performer and his people: the
staging
of Assemblywomen
14.40-15.20 Viviane Klein (Boston), Animaniacs and Ancient Greek Satyr
Drama
15.20-16.00 Steve Kidd (Brown), Is “elite comedy” a paradox? The case for
sympotic comedy
16.00-16.30 TEA
16.30-17.30 Key note address: Alan Sommerstein (Nottingham), How
“popular” was
Athenian comedy?
18.30-20.00 Reception: 65 Oakfield Avenue
Thursday 29 August 2013
9:30-10.50 Parallel sessions:
Sesssion 5 - Later Greek Humour:
9.30-10.10 Inger Kuin (NYU), Audience and performance in Lucian’s comic
dialogues
10.10-10.50 Anna Foka (Umea), Popular impact equals popular comedy? The
case
of Byzantine mimes
Session 6 - Film & TV:
9.30-10.10 Lee Broughton (Leeds), Popular comedy in a popular film form:
surveying and reassessing critical responses to comedic European Westerns
10.10-10.50 Kai Schwind (Lillehammer/Oslo), “A chilled out entertainer” –
Ricky Gervais in The Office, comedic performance versus the real
10.50-11.20 COFFEE
Session 7 - Roman Mime and Beyond:
11.20-12.00 Andrea Argius (Rome), Late-Republican mime: a source for
“public
opinion”
12.00-12.40 Ian Goh (Manchester), Eclogues and Satires as a joint
response to
popular comedy during the Triumvirate
12.40-14.00 LUNCH
Session 8 - Roman Comedy:
14.00-14.40 Peter Kruschwitz (Reading), Populi sensus maxime theatro et
spectaculis perspectus est
14.40-15.20 Amy Richlin (UCLA), Human trafficking and the memory of
freedom in
Plautine comedy
15.20-16.00 Peter Brown (Trinity, Oxford), The audiences of Plautus and
Terence
16.00-16.30 TEA
16.30-17.30 Key note address: Peter Wiseman (Exeter), Liberior iocus:
erotic
performance in the Roman world
19.30 Conference dinner at a local restaurant
Friday 30 August 2013
Session 9 - Early Modern:
09.30–10.10 Kate de Rycker (Kent), The reception of Aretino’s comedies in
Early Modern England
10.10-10.50 Martina Pranic, Highs and lows of Dundo Maroje:
reconsidering the
popularity of the most popular Ragusan comedy
10.50-11.20 COFFEE
Session 10 - Greek Comedy and Popular Modern Reception:
11.20-12.00 Olga Smiechowicz (Jagiellonian University, Krakow),
Aristophanes
for Polish culture between 1890 and 1918
12.00-12.40 Angeliki Varakis-Martin (Kent), Positive emotion, popular
celebration and cognition in the modern staging of Aristophanic comedy
12.40-14.00 LUNCH
Session 11 - Cross-media perspectives:
14.00-14.40 Ian Wilkie (Institute of Education, London), Vaudeville
comedy and
twentieth-century art
14.40-15.20 Marcel Lysgaard Lech (University of Southern Denmark), To be
and
not to be: reflections on the comic character
15.20-15.50 TEA
15.50-16.20 Concluding remarks and discussion: Costas Panayotakis and Ian
Ruffell
--
Dr Ian A Ruffell
Classics, School of Humanities, University of Glasgow G12 8QQ
+44 (0)141 330 5379
http://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/humanities/staff/ianruffell
----------------
ECREA-Mailing list
----------------
This mailing list is a free service from ECREA.
---
To unsubscribe, please visit http://www.ecrea.eu/mailinglist
---
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Postal address:
ECREA
Université Libre de Bruxelles
c/o Dept. of Information and Communication Sciences
CP123, avenue F.D. Roosevelt 50, b-1050 Bruxelles, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
----------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]