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Ancient Greece Declassified

12 The Comedy of Democracy w/ Edith Hall (Aristophanes)

Ancient Greece Declassified

Dr. Lantern Jack

History, Education

4.8587 Ratings

🗓️ 21 September 2017

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

World-renowned classicist Edith Hall joins us to discuss the relation between entertainment and politics in ancient Athens, particularly on the comic stage. Theatrical comedy, which was invented in Athens after the city's democratic revolution, was at first highly political. Comedy plays, put on publicly in the huge outdoor theater of Dionysus, often directly attacked prominent individuals in the city (who were usually in the audience). As mentioned in episode 8, Socrates was often parodied in the theater. Politicians like Pericles and Cleon were also periodically humiliated on the comic stage. No one was safe from ridicule. Moreover, playwrights did not hesitate to use scatological humor, sexual profanity, and lots of fart jokes in their satires of anyone and everything. 

Joining us to help give us a clearer view of the Athenian comic stage is Edith Hall, prolific author and professor of classics at King's College, London. We explore what it was like to see comedies in the Athenian theater and what the surviving plays can tell us about the role of political satire in a democratic society. For additional information on Greek comedy as well as our guest, visit the webpage for this episode at greecepodcast.com/12

Today marks the one year anniversary of this podcast. Thank you all so much for listening! In the spirit of Athenian comedy, we conclude today's episode on a festive note, ending with a very funny song from our friend Doug Metzger over at the Literature and History podcast. If you aren't already listening to that show, you should check it out! There's nothing else like it in the podcast world for ancient Greek literature.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, thanks for tuning in to ancient Greece, Declassified.

0:13.5

Episode 12, The Comedy of Democracy.

0:27.6

In episode 7, we talked about how the theater was invented in ancient Athens, and how the emergence of theater seems to be related to the emergence of democracy.

0:33.6

We explored how public entertainment may have contributed to the functioning of that earliest of democracies.

0:41.2

But in that episode, we focused our discussion on the genre of tragedy.

0:46.1

We left out half the picture of what was going on in the theater,

0:49.8

because in the same festivals of the god Dionysus,

0:53.5

when thousands of people gathered to watch tragedies,

0:57.0

they also watched comedies.

0:59.4

These comedies were quite vulgar.

1:02.5

I mean, they were full of scatological humor, sexual profanity, and lots of fart jokes.

1:10.4

They were also highly political, just like the tragedies

1:13.9

were very political, but the comedies were political in a different sort of way. These plays often

1:19.4

directly attacked prominent individuals in the city. We mentioned in episode 8 that Socrates

1:26.2

was often parodied in the theater, and he was in the

1:30.2

audience, by the way, as were the many politicians who were periodically roasted and humiliated

1:36.6

on the comic stage.

1:39.1

Now, the role of satire in society is an issue that's as relevant today as it ever was.

1:46.2

And so in this episode, we're going to further explore the relation between entertainment and

1:51.4

politics in Athens, but we're going to do it through a comedic lens this time.

1:56.1

We're going to look at what it was like to see Athenian comedies, what these plays were all about, and what

2:03.1

they tell us about life in ancient Athens. These plays are not only of historical interest.

...

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