Sicilianità 'greca' e italianità alla vigilia della Grande Guerra. Il caso dell'Agamennone

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15162/2465-0951/1094

Keywords:

Classical Reception, Greek Tragedy Reception, Twentieth Century Literature and Theatre, Italian Theatre, Aeschylus' Agamemnon

Abstract

At the eve of the Great War, on the 16th of April of 1914 at sunset, a group of around a hundred people, from actors to musicians and dancers mounted the stage of the Greek theatre of Syracuse (Sicily), a two-thousand-five-hundred-year-old theatre, to enact a tragedy just equally old: Aeschylus’ Agamemnon. Not only did this production revisit the tragedy in a unique environment and represent one of its first rehashes in Italy; it also inaugurated a now more than a-hundred-year-old Festival, the longest running festival of ancient drama. In this paper, I am going to talk about the powers at play in the staging of Agamemnon: a strong nationalism was combined with a cosmopolitan attitude, a combination that grounded another project which became culturally and politically relevant so as to inform INDA’s beginnings, Gabriele D’Annunzio’s Latin-Mediterranean theatre.

Author Biography

Giovanna Di Martino, University of Oxford

St. Hilda's College

Published

2019-05-29

Issue

Section

The Old Lie. I classici e la Grande Guerra - a cura di Roberta Berardi, Nicoletta Bruno, Anna Busetto, Luisa Fizzarotti