Agamemnon, a performance history
Agamemnon, a performance history
Agamemnon, a performance history is
the APGRD's second interactive/multimedia ebook. The ebook draws on a
unique collection of archival material and research at the APGRD and
beyond; it uses images, film, bespoke interviews with creative
practitioners and academics, and digital objects to tell the story of a
play that has inspired countless interpretations onstage and onscreen,
in dance, drama, and opera, across the globe from antiquity to the
present day.
The new ebook will be released in three two-chapter instalments.
Quicker to download and easier on storage requirements, these
instalments allow us to maximise the digital material we can include in
each volume. The first instalment – Beginnings & Whose Play? - is free to download now as an iBook from Apple Books.
DOWNLOAD the iBook (for Apple devices)*
Agamemnon, a performance history: Beginnings & Whose Play? Beginnings:
focussing on the opening scene of the tragedy, this chapter explores
how the play has been linked to 'origins' or 'beginnings’. Aeschylus is
seen as the 'father of tragedy’ and Agamemnon is the first play
in a trilogy that has often been staged at the founding of dramatic
festivals and institutions round the world. Whose Play? asks
who is the main character in Aeschylus’ tragedy and shows how Agamemnon
himself has rarely been the dominant focus of his name-play. Instead,
it is Clytemnestra who controls events and who has fascinated
playwrights and audiences across millennia.
* iTunes states that to view this book you must have an iPad with
iBooks 2 or later and iOS 5 or later, or an iPhone with iOS 8.4 or
later, or a Mac with OS X 10.9 or later. However, we have also
discovered that some interactive features may require OS X 10.10 or
later in order to work properly. macOS Catalina 10.15.3 is known to have
a few issues with keynote files, this may affect the animated timeline
and map. In our testing, Catalina 10.15.4 has not presented the same
problems. If you are using older systems you may need to update your
software.
Forthcoming:
Agamemnon, a performance history: Homecoming & Lyric: (forthcoming) Homecoming
asks what kind of character is Agamemnon? How has his masculinity been
understood at different times and in different places? How easy is
homecoming for soldiers after a war? Lyric: focuses on
the enslaved Trojan Priestess, Cassandra and the Chorus of old men from
Argos, who both have a central role in this play and yet have little or
no power to make things happen. The Choral Odes and Cassandra's
prophetic song have proved both a challenge and a cue for enormous
creativity in many modern productions and versions.
Agamemnon, a performance history: Endings & Iconography: (forthcoming) Endings considers what it has meant to stage Agamemnon
as a single play, when it is itself only the first play in a trilogy.
Is there closure? How effective is this as a stand-alone play? Just as
the opening scene of the tragedy has resonated across time and place, so
too has the final scene of violence and political insurrection. Iconography
looks at the strong iconographic tradition surrounding this play - from
Agamemnon's chariot to the bath in which he is murdered, the carpet of
tapestries to Clytemnestra's axe. The chapter revolves around a
photographic gallery showcasing how modern productions have tackled
these iconic moments.
EPUB versions for devices other than Apple will follow.
See also: Medea, a performance history for the download links to our first interactive/multimedia ebook.
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