Reviews
Platter's book is a meticulously researched and philologically sound study of specific plays, performed by a skilled classicist... it engages with the nuances of Bakhtinian theory in a lucidly sophisticated manner.
Taking its lead from the work of Bakhtin, Platter's challenging and thought-provoking book represents a full-blooded attempt to look at Aristophanic comedy through a 'carnival' lens.
Carnival of Genres is important because it validates the ambiguity in Aristophanes, but also because it reveals the problem with valuing ambiguity for its own sake.
A focused, coherent, and convincing study of the dialogic interaction among various sources from which Aristophanes composed his comedies.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Bakhtin, Aristophanes, and the Carnival of Genres
1. Dikaiopolis on Modern Art
2. The Failed Programs of Clouds
3. Clouds on Clouds and the Aspirations of Wasps
4. Questioning
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Bakhtin, Aristophanes, and the Carnival of Genres
1. Dikaiopolis on Modern Art
2. The Failed Programs of Clouds
3. Clouds on Clouds and the Aspirations of Wasps
4. Questioning Authority: Homer and Oracular Speech
5. The Return of Telephus: Acharnians, Thesmophoriazusae, and the Dialogic Background
Conclusion: The Centrifugal Style
Notes
Bibliography
Index