Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Aristophanes
- Athenian comic playwright
- He wrote about forty plays
- Comedy can exert pressure on public opinion and public policy
- A consistent slant on something represents own opinion of dramatist, encouraging audience to take it up
- It is the poets duty to make people into better citizens
- Lived c. 446 - c. 386 BC
- Peloponnesian War (431–404 bce)
- Between imperialist Athens and conservative Sparta
- Athens was at its height of power and fame
- Radical democracy, all adult male citzens had equal share in policy decisions
- All over-30's equal opportunity to take part in administration of justice
- Pericles
- Athens fighting half of Greece and Persia, 3 continents
- Peace of Greece=Athen's
greatest sea-power,
Sparta greatest
land-power
- 415, Athens invades Sicily, provoking Sparta
- 413 Sicilian Expedition disaster
- Alcibiades, Athenian general (exiled to Sparta for offences against religion) seized fortified base close to Athens, crisis forms background to Lysistrata
- 411- Coup overthrow Athenian democracy
- Regime- 'Four hundred' failed peace
- Oligarchy 'Five thousand'
- 410, more radical version of old democracy
- Presented his plays at comedy competitions of the Lenaea and Dionysia festivals
- Use of chorus, mime, and burlesque
- Aristophanes lampooned the most important personalities and institutions of his day
- Cleon, Hyperbolus, Cleophon
- Prosecution threat 420's for attacks on Cleon
- Immense, kaleidoscopic artistry
- Inventiveness in word/image/structure/sound/sight
- Denies him serious aims in political or social fields
- Never openly opposes democracy
- Ridicules features
- Use of mass juries dominated by elderly, poor
- Daily jury service payments waste of public money
- Accepts it as only political system available
- Is not always supportive of war, but voices Athenian pride in victories over Persians at Marathon 490, Salamis 480
- Ideal vision of Greek politics was Athens and Sparta ruling Greece together. Never happened.