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Moulding Dramatic Traditions of Euboea: A Study of Theatrical Figurines & Local Performance Culture

Moulding Dramatic Traditions of Euboea: A Study of Theatrical Figurines & Local Performance Culture Lecture by Justin S. Dwyer (Neda and Franz Leipen Fellow, the Canadian Institute in Greece; Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Classical, Near Eastern, and Religious Studies, University of British Columbia) - 4 March 2020

“Moulding the Dramatic Traditions of Euboea: A Study of Theatrical Figurines and Local Performance Culture”



Euboea produced some of Greek drama’s most renowned figures (e.g. Apollodorus of Carystus, Lycophron of Chalcis, Achaeus of Eretria); however, we know very little about the local dramatic traditions that shaped their poetry. To better understand this important alternative to Athenian drama, this talk seeks to build a diachronic model of the Euboean dramatic tradition. Since no Euboean dramatic texts survive, an interdisciplinary study of the relevant material record provides a basis for this study. Enhanced by consideration of the epigraphic record and the Hellenistic phases of the theatre at Eretria, the analysis focuses primarily on small-scale terracotta sculpture and considers both figurines and masks from collections in Karystos, Eretria, Chalkis, and Athens. From this integrated survey, a distinct regional identity of Euboean theatre begins to emerge.

Euboea,Euboia,Greek drama,history,archaeology,figurine,theatre,epigraphy,Eretria,Karystos,mask,

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