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Stephe Harrop's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
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Stephe Harrop's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
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Stephe Harrop deposited Physical Performance and the Languages of Translation on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
Our lack of reliable information concerning the physical and choreographic aspects of ancient tragic performance permits modern writers to construct their own imaginative re-creations of the ancient text/body relationship in a wide variety of modes. The range of ways in which texts translated or adapted from ancient tragedy are capable of…[Read more]
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Stephe Harrop deposited Poetic Language and Corporeality in Translations of Greek Tragedy on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
The translation of ancient tragedy is often considered at a linguistic level, as if the drama consisted simply of words being written, spoken and heard. This article contends that translation for the stage is a process in which literary decisions have physical, as well as verbal, outcomes. It traces existing formulations concerning the links…[Read more]
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Stephe Harrop deposited Speech, Silence and Epic Performance: Alice Oswald’s Memorial on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
Alice Oswald’s recitation of her 2011 poem Memorial is an intensely modest, self-effacing performance. Yet it is also one which invites us to consider key questions about the ancient practice, and modern re-performance, of epic poetry. Oswald explicitly cites the antiphonal lament of Homeric funerary ritual as an influence upon her r…[Read more]
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Stephe Harrop deposited ‘Ercles’ Vein’: Heracles as Bottom in Ted Hughes’ Alcestis on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
Ted Hughes’ version of Euripides’ Alcestis (1999) is a play which diverges significantly from its ancient source-text, most notably in an interpolated sequence during which the drunken Heracles re-enacts his own labours, before experiencing traumatic visions. This article identifies this un-Euripidean interlude as a characteristic instance of int…[Read more]
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This review-essay discusses George Brant’s play Grounded (2013) in the context of its production at the Gate Theatre (London). It begins with a critical examination of my own “mis-seeing” of the play’s protagonist as a version of the tragic Heracles. The analysis which follows compares key aspects of The Pilot’s narrative with Euripides’ Heracles…[Read more]
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Stephe Harrop's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years ago
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Cristina León Alfar edited the event MLA 2018, Special Session #830A: Finding Security through Action in the groups 2018 MLA Convention, Help & How-To, Interdisciplinary Approaches to Culture and Society, TC History and Literature, TC Women’s and Gender Studies, TM Literary and Cultural Theory, TM The Teaching of Literature. on MLA Commons 8 years, 1 month ago
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Cristina León Alfar's profile was updated on MLA Commons 8 years, 1 month ago
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Cristina León Alfar created the event MLA 2018, Special Session #830A: Finding Security through Action in the groups 2018 MLA Convention, Help & How-To, Interdisciplinary Approaches to Culture and Society, TC History and Literature, TC Women’s and Gender Studies, TM Literary and Cultural Theory, TM The Teaching of Literature. on MLA Commons 8 years, 1 month ago
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Cristina León Alfar created the event MLA 2018, Session #225: Resisting Insecurity beyond the Academy in the groups 2018 MLA Convention, Help & How-To, Interdisciplinary Approaches to Culture and Society, TC History and Literature, TC Women’s and Gender Studies, TM Literary and Cultural Theory, TM The Teaching of Literature. on MLA Commons 8 years, 1 month ago
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Cristina León Alfar created the event MLA Session: #771 Flourishing in Difficult Times in the groups 2018 MLA Convention, Help & How-To, Interdisciplinary Approaches to Culture and Society, TC History and Literature, TC Women’s and Gender Studies, TM Literary and Cultural Theory, TM The Teaching of Literature. on MLA Commons 8 years, 1 month ago
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Cristina León Alfar deposited Looking for Goneril and Regan in the group
CLCS Renaissance and Early Modern on MLA Commons 8 years, 3 months agoIn _King Lear_ the power Goneril and Regan desire and the violence in which they participate defy orthodox notions of appropriate feminine conduct. Because power as a feminine attribute is rejected as a violation of nature, they become “evil.” Rather than assuming that real women, or good women, will not defend their own power or the sov…[Read more]
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