词条 | Parabasis |
释义 |
In Greek comedy, the parabasis (plural parabases; {{lang-grc|παράβασις}}, plural: {{lang|grc|παραβάσεις}}) is a point in the play when all of the actors leave the stage and the chorus is left to address the audience directly. The chorus partially or completely abandons its dramatic role, to step forward (parabasis)[1] and talk to the audience on a topic completely irrelevant to the subject of the play.[2] StructureA parabasis usually consists of three songs (S) alternating with three speeches (s) (or recitatives) in the order S-s-S-s-S-s. The first speech, or parabasis proper - generally in anapaest[3] - often ends with a passage which is to be rattled off very quickly (theoretically in one breath - called a πνῖγος – pnigos). Examples
Authorial voiceThe chorus in the parabasis sometimes uses its own voice, sometimes that of the play’s author, to address the audience.[6] How far the latter is to be taken as ‘authentic’ is a matter for debate. The old view was that Aristophanes is speaking directly to his fellow-Athenians in the parabasis; and that as a result, as Northrop Frye put it, “his opinions on every subject are written all over his plays”.[7] A postmodern interpretation would see the authorial voice as metatheatrical, offering a parody of rhetorical debating points, rather than unmediated criticism.[8] DeclineThe parabasis is exclusively a feature of Old Comedy, and its decline can be charted in the plays of Aristophanes. The second parabasis is gradually abandoned, the chorus ceases to speak out of character in the parabasis itself, and finally the latter is abandoned altogether.[9] Where the diminishment in the role of the chorus was traditionally linked to the financial pressures of wartime,[10] more recently Stephen Halliwell has preferred to see the decline in terms of theatrical evolution.[11] See also{{Columns-list|
}} References1. ^J E Sandys ed., A Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (London 1891) p. 458 2. ^S Halliwell ed., Birds and Other Plays (Oxford 1998) p. xxxvi 3. ^S Halliwell ed., Birds and Other Plays (Oxford 1998) p. xxxvi-vii 4. ^S Halliwell ed., 'Birds and Other Plays (Oxford 1998) p. xi 5. ^Aristophanes, quoted in C Russo, Aristophanes (London 1994) p. 125 6. ^J Boardman ed., The Oxford History of the Classical World (Oxford 1986) p. 174 7. ^N Frye, Anatomy of Criticism (Princeton 1971) p. 177 8. ^S Halliwell ed., Birds and Other Plays (Oxford 1998) p. xliv 9. ^S Halliwell ed., Birds and Other Plays (Oxford 1998) p. xxxvii-ix 10. ^J E Sandys ed., A Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (London 1891) p. 152 11. ^S Halliwell ed., Birds and Other Plays (Oxford 1998) p. xxxix Further reading
External links
2 : Ancient Greek theatre|Ancient Greek comedy |
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