Drama in the Roman Republic: Getting Started
Prepared by Timothy
J. Moore
Department of
Classics, The University of
Texas at Austin
timmoore@mail.utexas.edu
GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
- Beacham, Richard C. The Roman Theatre and Its Audience.
Cambridge, MA, Harvard Univ. Press, 1992.
- Beare, William. The Roman Stage: A Short History of Latin
Drama in the Time of the Republic. 3d ed., London: Methuen,
1964.
- Bieber, Margarete. The History of the Greek and Roman
Theater. 2nd ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961.
Dated, but still useful guide to the archaeological evidence for
theatrical practice.
- Lefèvre, Eckard (ed.). Das römische Drama.
Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1978. Collection of
essays.
- Csapo, Eric and William J. Slater. The Context of Ancient
Drama. Ann Arbor, MI, Univ. of Michigan Press, 1995. Source
book of Realia for both Greek and Roman theater.
- Duncan, Anne. Performance and Identity in the Classical World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Includes chapters on the parasite and the meretrix as actors, and on Roscius.
- Dupont, Florence. L'acteur-roi: Le théatre à
Rome. Collection Realia. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1985.
- Garton, Charles. Personal Aspects of the Roman Theatre.
Toronto: Hakkert, 1972.
- Gratwick, Adrian. "Drama," in Cambridge History of
Classical Literature I: Latin Literature, ed. by E. J. Kenney
and W. Clausen. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982, pp.
77-137.
- Gruen, Erich S. "The Theater and Aristocratic Culture," in
Culture and National Identity in Republican Rome. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press, 1992. 183-222.
- Manuwald, Gesine, Roman Republican Theatre. Cambridge: Cabriedge University Press, 2011. History of Roman theatre until the end of the Republic.
- Jory, E.J. "Continuity and Change in the Roman Theatre," in
Betts, Hooker, and Oren, edd., Studies in Honour of T.B.L.
Webster (Bristol, 1986) 143-52. "The heydey of the Roman
theatre was not in the Republic but in the Empire."
- Rawson, Elizabeth. "Theatrical Life in Republican Rome and
Italy." Proceedings of the British School at Rome 53 (1985)
97-113.
- Traina, A. Vortit barbare. Le traduzioni poetiche da Livio
Andronico a Cicerone. Chapters on Naevius, Caecilius, Ennius'
tragedies, Terence, and Accius.
COMEDY
- Arnott, W. Geoffrey. Menander, Plautus, Terence.
G&R New Surveys in the Classics, N0. 9. Oxford, Clarendon
Press, 1975. Excellent short introduction to the three
playwrights.
- Duckworth, George Eckel. The Nature of Roman Comedy,: A
Study in Popular Entertainment. Princeton 1952. Excellent
synthesis of work on Roman comedy through 1950.
- Dutsch, Dorota. Feminine Discourse in Roman Comedy: On Echoes and Voices. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
- Gaiser, K. "Zur Eigenart der römischen Komödie:
Plautus und Terenz gegenüber ihren griechischen Vorbildern,"
Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 1.2
(Berlin, 1972) pp. 1027-1113. Good way to start considering the
controversies about how Plautus and Terence changed their Greek
originals.
- Goldberg, Sander M. "Roman Comedy Gets Back to Basics," Journal of Roman Studies 101 (2011): 206-21. Review of recent scholarship.
- Hunter, Richard L. The New Comedy of Greece and Rome.
Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
- Konstan, David. Roman Comedy. Ithaca, NY: Cornell
University Press, 1983.
- Leffingwell, Georgia Williams. Social and Private Life at
Rome in the Time of Plautus and Terence. Columbia University:
Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, Vol. 81, No. 1. New
York: Longmans, Green & Co., 1918. Dated and sometimes naive,
but still a good place to start for thoughts about the social
background to Plautus and Terence.
- Leigh, Matthew. Comedy and the Rise of Rome. London,
2004.
- López Gregoris, Rosario. El amor en la comedia latina. Análisis léxico y semántico. Madrid: Ediciones Clásicas, 2002.
- Marshall, C.W. The Stagecraft and Performance of Roman Comedy.
Cambridge, Eng., 2006. Replaces Beare as the best guide to the
performance of Plautus and (to a lesser extent) Terence.
- Ritschl, Friedrich. Parerga zu Plautus und Terenz.
Berlin, 1845; repr. Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1965. Collection of
writings by the foremost Plautine scholar of the 19th
century.
- Sharrock,
Alison. Reading Roman Comedy: Poetics and Playfulness in Plautus and
Terence. W.B. Stanford Memorial Lectures. Cambridge; New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2009.
- Segal, Erich (ed.). Oxford Readings in Menander, Plautus,
and Terence. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. Various
essays reprinted.
- Spranger, Peter P. Historische Untersuchungen zu den
Sklavenfiguren des Plautus und Terenz. 2nd ed. Stuttgart:
Franz Steiner, 1984.
- Sutton, Dana F. Ancient Comedy: The War of the
Generations. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1993. Includes
arguments that Plautus and Terence challenged contemporary social
mores.
- Wiles, David. The Masks of Menander: Sign and Meaning in
Greek and Roman Performance. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1991. (includes chapters on Plautus and Terence). Explains
New and Roman Comedy in terms of Aristotelian and semiotic
theory.
- Wright, John. Dancing in Chains: the Stylistic Unity of the
Comoedia Palliata. Rome 1974. Best study of all the writers of
palliata together; argues that all writers of
palliata except Terence followed very similar rules of
style, characterization, and plot.
Meter and Music
- Lindsay, W.M. Early Latin Verse. Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1922. Has been largely replaced by Questa, but still a good
start in English.
- Maurach, Gregor. Untersuchungen zum Aufbau plautinischer
Lieder. Hypomnemata 10. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck &
Ruprecht, 1964.
- Moore, Timothy J. Music in Roman Comedy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.
- Questa, Cesare. La metrica di Plauto e di Terenzio. Urbino: QuattroVenti, 2007. Best introduction to Plautus' and Terence's meter.
- Ritschl, F. "Canticum und diverbium bei Plautus,"
Rheinisches Museum 26 (1871) 599-637. Nachtrag zu "Canticum
und diverbium bei Plautus," Rheinisches Museum 27 (1872)
186-192, Rheinisches Museum 27 (1872) 352ff, repr. in
Opuscula Philologica 3 (Leipzig: Teubner, 1877), 1-54. The
important discovery that all passages not in iambic senarii were
probably accompanied.
- Soubiran, Jean. Essai sur la versification dramatique des
Romains : senaire iambique et septenaire trochaique. (Paris:
Editions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique,
1988)
PLAUTUS
On the web
Bibliography
- Bertini, Ferruccio. "Venti' anni di studi plautini in Italia
(1950-1970)," Bollettino di Studi Latini 1 (1971)
23-41.
- Bubel, Frank. Bibliographie zu Plautus, 1976-1989. Bonn
1992
- Fogazza, Donatella. "Plauto 1935-1975," Lustrum 19
(1976 [1978]) 79-295.
- Hanson, J.A. "Scholarship on Plautus Since 1950," Classical
World 59 (1965-1966) 103-107, 126-129, 141-148.
- Hughes, J. David. A Bibliography of Scholarship on
Plautus. Amsterdam: A. M. Hakkert, 1975.
- Segal, Erich. "Scholarship on Plautus, 1965-1976,"
Classical World 74 (1981) 353ff.
Commentaries:
- Ussing, Johan Louis, 1820-1905. Commentarius in Plauti
comoedias. Denuo edendum curavit indicibus auxit Andreas
Thierfelder. Hildesheim 1972.
- Brix, Julius and Niemeyer, May, edd. Ausgewählte
Komödien des T. Maccius Plautus. Leipzig: B. G. Teubner,
1907.
Concordance
- Lodge, Gonzalez. Lexicon Plautinum. Leipzig: Teubner,
1904-1938. Nice if you want a book to supplement Pandora.
Chronology
- Buck, Charles Henry, Jr. A Chronology of the Plays of
Plautus. Baltimore, 1940 (no publisher named). Rather
daring.
- Schutter, Klaas Herman Eltjo. Quibus annis comoediae
Plautinae primum actae sint quaeritur. Groningae 1952.
Excellent synthesis of scholarship on chronology, with sound
proposals of his own.
- Sedgewick, W. B. "Plautine Chronology," American Journal of
Philology 70 (1949) 376-383. Good on methodology.
Plautus and His Greek Originals
- Bain, D. "Plautus vortit barbare. Plautus
Bacchides 526-61 and Menander Dis Exapaton 102-12,"
in Creative Imitation and Latin Literature. (Cambridge
1979), pp. 17-34.
- Fraenkel, Eduard. Plautinisches im Plautus. Berlin
1922.
- Fraenkel, Edward. Elementi plautini in Plauto. Firenze
1960 (Italian translation with addenda of Plautinisches im
Plautus). Arguably the most important book on Plautus still;
careful analysis of just how Plautus added comic elements to his
originals.
- Fraenkel, Edward. Plautine Elements in Plautus, transl. T. Drevikovsky and F. Muecke. Oxford, 2007. Long awaited English translation of the above.
- Handley, Eric Walter. "Menander and Plautus,." Inaugural
Lecture, University College, London, 5 Feb, 1968. London: Levis,
1968. 1st publication of our only extant passage of Menander
adapted by Plautus.
- Lefèvre, Eckard, Ekkehard Stärk, and Gregor
Vogt-Spira. Plautus barbarus: Sechs Kapitel zur
Originalität des Plautus. ScriptOralia 25. Tübingen:
Gunter Narr, 1991. Radical attribution of originality to Plautus
arguing that the Italian folk tradition is more important than the
Greek originals in determining the nature of Plautus' plays.
- Leo, Friedrich. Plautinische Forschungen zur Kritik und
Geschichte der Komödie. Berlin, 1912. Summation of work
of probably the most influential Plautine scholar before
Fraenkel.
- Zagagi, Netta. Tradition and Originality in Plautus:
Studies of the Amatory Motifs in Plautine Comedy.
Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1980. Rebuttal,
sometimes persuasive, of some of Fraenkel's theses.
Plautine "Metatheatre"
- Barchiesi, Marino. "Plauto e il 'metateatro' antico," Il
Verri 31 (1969) 113-130.
- Chiarini, Gioachino. La recita: Plauto, la farsa, la
festa. Bologna: Patròn Editore, 1979.
- Moore, Timothy J. The Theater of Plautus: Playing to the
Audience. Austin, University of Texas Press, 1998.
- Muecke, Francis. "Plautus and the Theatre of Disguise,"
Classical Antiquity 5 (1986) 216-229.
- Petrone, Gianna. Morale e antimorale nelle commedie di
Plauto: Ricerche sullo Stichus. Palermo: Palumbo Editore,
1977.
- Petrone, Gianna. Teatro antico e inganno: Finzioni
Plautine. Palermo: G. B. Palumbo & Co., 1983.
- Slater, Niall W. Plautus in Performance: The Theatre of the
Mind. Princeton, N.J. 1985. Argues that what makes Plautine theater work is its
awareness of its own theatricality.
Other
- Abel, Karlhans. Die Plautusprologe. Diss. Frankfurt,
1955.
- Anderson, William S., Barbarian Play: Plautus' Roman
Comedy. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1993.
- Benz, Lore, Ekkehard Stärk, and Gregor Vogt-Spira (edd.).
Plautus und die Tradition des Stegreifspiels.
Tübingen: Gunter Narr, 1995. A number of useful essays on the
influence of popular farce on Plautus.
- della Corte, Francesco. Da Sarsina a Roma: Ricerche
Plautine. Genova: Instituto Universitario di Magistero,
1952.
- Earl, D. C. "Political Terminology in Plautus,"
Historia 9 (1960) 235-243.
- Dorey, T. A. and Dudley, Donald K. (edd.). Roman Drama.
London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1965. Several essays on
Plautus and the Plautine tradition.
- Fontaine, Michael. Funny Words in Plautine Comedy. New York, Oxford University Press, 2009. Provocative argument that Plautus wrote for an upper-class, learned audience.
- Gratwick, A. S. "Titus Maccius Plautus," Classical
Quarterly 23 (1973) 78-84. (on Plautus' names)
- Gruen, Erich S. "Plautus and the Public Stage," in Studies
in Greek Culture and Roman Policy. Leiden: Brill, 1990.
124-57.
- Langen, Peter. Beiträge zur Kritik und Erklärung
des Plautus. Leipzig: Teubner, 1880, repr. Hildesheim: Georg
Olms, 1973. Very useful on some basic philological questions.
- Lindsay, W. M. An Introduction to Latin Textual Emendation
Based on the Text of Plautus. New York and London: MacMillan
& Co., 1896. Also on line at http://perseus.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0071
- Lindsay, W. M. The Syntax of Plautus. Oxford, 1907,
repr. New York: G. E. Stechert, 1936. Also on line at http://perseus.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0070
- McCarthy, Kathleen. Slaves, Masters, and the Art of
Authority in Plautine Comedy. Princeton, 2000.
- Segal, Erich. Roman Laughter: The Comedy of Plautus.
2nd edition, London: Oxford Univ. Press, 1987. An overstated but
nevertheless important argument using the Freudian "pleasure
principle" to explain Plautus' "Saturnalian" comedy.
- Taladoire, Barthélémy A. Essai sur le comique
de Plaute. Monte Carlo: L'Imprimerie Nationale de Monaco,
1956. PCL 878 PS . YT.
- Thierfelder, Andreas. De rationibus interpolationum
Plautinarum. Leipzig: Teubner, 1929. Repr. Hildesheim: Georg
Olms, 1971.
- Wiles, David. "Taking Farce Seriously: Recent Critical
Approaches to Plautus," in Themes in Drama, 10: Farce, ed.
James Redmond. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1988.
261-71.
- Wright, John. "Plautus," in Ancient Writers: Greece and
Rome, ed. T. James Luce. Volume I: Homer to Caesar. New York,
Charles Scribner's Sons, 1982, pp. 501-23. Excellent introduction
to Plautus as a whole and to each of the plays.
- Zwierlein, Otto. Zur Kritik und Exegese des Plautus.
Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur, Mainz, Abhandlungen
der geistes- und sozialwissenschaftlichen Klasse. Stuttgart, Franz
Steiner. The extreme opposite of Lefèvre et al.; argues
that Plautus stayed very close to his originals, and much of what
looks "unGreek" (sometimes over 1/3 of a given play) is later
interpolation by actors.
- I: Poenulus und Curculio. Jahrgang 1990, Nr. 4.
- II: Miles gloriosus. Jahrgang 1991, Nr. 3.
- III: Pseudolus. Jahrgang 1991, Nr. 14.
- IV: Bacchides. Jahrgang 1992, Nr. 4.
TERENCE
Bibliography
- Goldberg, S. M. "Scholarship on Terence and the Fragments of
Roman Comedy, 1959-1980," Classical World 75 (1981)
77-115.
- Marti, H. "Terenz 1909-1959," Lustrum 6 (1961) 114-238;
8 (1963) 5-101, 244-64.
Commentaries
- Ashmore, Sidney Gillespie. P. Terenti Afri Comoediae .
2d ed. New York 1908(1910).
- Donatus. Aeli Donati quod fertur Commentum Terenti. Ed.
Wessner. 2 vols. Leipzig:Teubner, 1902, 1905.
Concordance
- McGlynn, Patrick. Lexicon Terentianum. London: Blackie
and Son, 1963 and 1967.
Language
- Bagordo, Andreas. Beobachtungen zur Sprache des Terenz : mit besonderer Berucksichtigung der umgangssprachlichen Elemente. Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2001.
- Karakasis, Evangelos. Terence and the Language of Roman Comedy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.
The Illustrated Manuscripts
- Jones, L. W. and C. R. Morey. 1932. The Miniatures of the Manuscripts of Terence Prior to the Thirteenth Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Wright, David H. 2006. The Lost Late Antique Illustrated Terence. Città del Vaticano: Vatican Library.
Other
- Arnott, W. Geoffrey. "Terence's Prologues," in Papers of
the Liverpool Latin Seminar, Fifth Volume 1985, ed. by Francis
Cairns. Liverpool, Francis Cairns, 1986, pp. 1-7. Argues for a
Greek precedent for Terence's polemic prologues.
- Büchner, K. Das Theater des Terenz. Heidelberg,
1974.
- Denzler, Bruno. Der Monolog bei Terenz. Zürich: P.
G. Keller, 1908.
- Forehand, W.G. Terence (Boston, 1985). Good
introduction to plays.
- Goldberg, Sander M. Understanding Terence. Princeton,
N.J. 1986. Best book in English on Terence.
- Haffter, Heinz. "Terenz und seine künstlerische
Eigenart," Museum Helveticum 10 (1953) 1-20, 73-102.
Translated as Terenzio e la sua personalità
artistica. Rome: Edizione dell' Ateneo, 1969. Best analysis of
what makes Terence unique.
- Ludwig, W. "The Originality of Terence and his Greek Models,"
GRBS 9 (1968) 169-92.
- Parker, Holt. "Plautus vs. Terence: Audience and Popularity
Re-examined." American Journal of Philology 117 (1996):
585-617. Important counter to the traditional view that Terence
was unsuccessful.
- Sandbach, F.H.. "Terence," in Ancient Writers: Greece and
Rome, ed. T. James Luce. Volume I: Homer to Caesar. New York,
Charles Scribner's Sons, 1982.
- Umbrico, Alessio. Terenzio e i suoi 'nobiles'. Invenzione e realtà di un controverso legame ( Pisa, 2010).
LOST COMEDY
Texts
- Bonaria, Mario. I mimi romani. (Rome 1965). Text,
introduction, Italian translation.
- Davidault, André. Comoedia Togata: Fragments
(Paris 1981). Text, introduction, French translation,
commentary.
- Frassinetti, Paolo. Atellanae fabulae. (Rome 1967).
Text, introduction, Italian translation, commentary.
- Ribbeck, Otto. Scaenicae Romanorum poesis fragmenta.
Tertiis curis, Lipsiae 1897-1898. Volume 2: Comedy. Remains
standard text for comic fragments.
Bibliographies
- Goldberg (see under Terence bibliography above)
- J.H. Waszink, "Zum Anfangsstadium der römischen
Literatur," ANRW I.2 (1972) 869-927. Good critical
bibliography on Livius Andronicus and Naevius.
Other
- Suerbaum, W. Untersuchungen zur Selbstdarstellung
älterer römischer Dichter: Livius Andronicus, Naevius,
Ennius. (Hildesheim, 1968). Mostly on epic, but includes
discussion of Livius' and Naevius' plays.
Naevius
- Jocelyn, H.D., "The Poet Cn. Naevius, P. Cornelius Scipio and
Q. Caecilius Metellus," Antichthon 3 (1969) 32-47.
Sceptical treatment of traditions surrounding Naevius' life.
- Marmorale, E.V., Naevius Poeta (3rd ed., Florence
1953). Text of all of Naevius' works with useful introduction and
commentary.
- von Albrecht, M. "Zur Tarentilla des Naevius," Museum
Helveticum 32 (1975) 230-39.
Turpilius
- Rychlewska, Turpilii comici fragmenta. (Leipzig 1971).
Text
Caecilius
- Guardi, Tommaso. Cecilio Stazio: I frammenti (Palermo
1974). Text, introduction, Italian translation, commentary
TRAGEDY and PRAETEXTAE (see also lost comedy and Naevius
above)
Texts
- Klotz, Alfred. Scaenicorum romanorum fragmenta, I:
Tragicorum Fragmenta (Munich, 1953). Supplements but does not
replace Ribbeck.
- Ribbeck, Otto. Scaenicae Romanorum poesis fragmenta.
Tertiis curis, Lipsiae 1897-1898. Volume 1: Tragedy . Remains the
standard text. except for Ennius.
Bibliographies
- De Rosalia, Antonino. "Rassegna degli studi sulla tragedia
latina arcaica (1965-1986)," Bolletino di Studi Latini 19
(1989) 76-144.
- Mette, Hans Joachim. "Die Römische Tragödie und die
Neufunde zur Griechischen Tragödie (insbesondere für die
Jahre 1945-1964)," Lustrum 9 (1964) 5-200 . Extensive
bibliographical survey.
- Manuwald, Gesine. "Römische Tragödien und Praetexten
republikanischer Zeit: 1964-2002," Lustrum 43 (2001)
11-237. Extensive bibliographical survey.
Other
- A.J. Boyle. An Introduction to Roman Tragedy. London and New York, 2006.
- Flower, Harriet I. "Fabulae praetextae in Context: When
Were Plays on Contemporary Subjects Performed in Republican Rome?"
Classical Quarterly 45 (1995) 170-190. Proposes that
praetextae on contemporary subjects are designed to explain a
general's vow and were performed at ludi votivi or dedications of
temples.
- Gildenhard, Ingo, "Buskins & SPQR: Roman receptions of Greek tragedy," in Ingo Gildenhard and Martin Revermann (edd.), Beyond the Fifth Century: Interactions with Greek Tragedy from the Fourth Century BCE to the Middle Ages (Berlin, 2010).
- Manuwald, Gesine. Fabulae praetextae : Spuren einer
literarischen Gattung der Romer (Munich, 2001).
- Manuwald, Gesine (ed.). Identität und Alterität in der frührömischen Tragödie (Würzburg, 2000).
- Manuwald, Gesine. Pacuvius, summus tragicus poeta: Zum dramatischen Profil seiner Tragödien (Munich, 2003).
- Ribbeck, Otto. Die römischen Tragödie im
Zeitalter der Republik (Leipzig, 1870, repr. Hildesheim,
1968).
Ennius
Texts
- Jocelyn, H.D., The Tragedies of Ennius (Cambridge,
1967). Text, introduction, commentary.
- Vahlen, Johannes. Ennianae poesis reliquiae iteratis
curis. (Lipsiae 1928). Long the standard text for all of
Ennius; now replaced by Jocelyn on the tragedies.
Other
- Brooks, R.A.B., Ennius and Roman Tragedy (New York,
1981).
- Drabkin, Norma L. The Medea Exul of Ennius. 1937.
- Jocelyn, H.D., "Ennius as a Dramatic Poet," in Ennius
(Fondation Hardt, Entretiens XVII, Geneve 1972), pp. 41-95.
- Jocelyn, H.D., "The Poems of Quintus Ennius," ANRW 1.2
(1972) 987-1026. Good introduction to all of Ennius.
Last modified January 28, 2012 by timmoore@mail.utexas.edu