You are not currently logged in. Please create an account or log in to view the full course.

Dithyramb

This is the first lesson only. Please create an account or log in to view the rest of the lessons.

 

Generating Lecture Summary...

Lecture summary generation can take up to 30 seconds.

Please be patient while we process your request

Generating Lecture Summary...

Lecture summary generation can take up to 30 seconds.

Please be patient while we process your request

Generating Vocabulary List...

Vocabulary list generation can take up to 30 seconds.

Please be patient while we process your request

Generating Questions...

Questions generation can take up to 30 seconds.

Please be patient while we process your request

Generating Questions...

Questions generation can take up to 30 seconds.

Please be patient while we process your request

  • About
  • Transcript
  • Cite

About the lecture

In this module, we think about the opening chorus of the play, a type of song known as a dithyramb. In particular, we focus in the development of tragedy from the dithyramb, as well as the particular associations between dithyramb, tragedy, and the god Dionysus.

About the lecturer

Richard Seaford is a professor of the Department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Exeter in England. He is the author of academic books, especially on ancient Greece, and has penned over seventy academic papers.

His work on Athenian tragedy and religion has led him to investigate the historical conditions for the radical development of Greek culture in the sixth century BC (sometimes called the origin of European culture), and to argue that a crucial factor in this development was money: the advanced Greek polis of this period was the first society in history that we know to have been thoroughly monetised.

Money and the Early Greek Mind. Homer, Tragedy, Philosophy (Cambridge 2004) explores the socio-historical conditions that made this first monetisation possible as well as its profound cultural consequences, notably the invention of 'philosophy' and of drama.

The investigation is taken further in several recent papers, for instance in ‘Money and Tragedy’ in W. V. Harris (ed.), The Monetary Systems of the Greeks and Romans (2008). His most recent book is Cosmology and the Polis: the Social Construction of Space and Time in the Tragedies of Aeschylus (Cambridge 2012). In 2005-2008 he was awarded a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship by the Leverhulme Trust. For 2013-4 he was awarded an AHRC Fellowship for a comparative historical study of early Indian with early Greek thought.

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Seaford, R. (2018, August 15). Euripides: Bacchae - Dithyramb [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/euripides-bacchae?auth=0&lesson=1229&option=125&type=lesson

MLA style

Seaford, R. "Euripides: Bacchae – Dithyramb." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 15 Aug 2018, https://massolit.io/options/euripides-bacchae?auth=0&lesson=1229&option=125&type=lesson