Mitch Brown is an assistant professor of classical studies at William & Mary.
Description
Acknowledgments Note on Texts Introduction Chapter 1: An Isolated House Chapter 2: The Woman of the House Chapter 3: Women in the Shadows Chapter 4: Invisible Marriage in the Epitrepontes Chapter 5: Fatherhood in Terence's Self-Tormentor Conclusion: Menander and the Renaissance Notes Works Cited Index Index Locorum
"This excellent book is packed with insights about what made Menander's domestic drama so innovative. With detailed analysis of five plays, Brown shows how cleverly Menander combines what is visible with what is not, focusing attention on what occurs offstage in the characters' private homes." - Anne H. Groton, author of From Alpha to Omega: A Beginning Course in Classical Greek "A well-argued, original discussion of the importance of offstage action in Menander's plays. Detailed analysis and careful close readings show how Menander laid the foundations of later European drama with its ever-increasing focus on indoor, domestic action. An attentive and compelling contribution." - William Furley, editor of Menander "Misoumenos" or "The Hated Man"