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Jul 2024
14m 27s

Among the Ancients II: Plautus and Teren...

London Review of Books
About this episode

In episode seven, we turn to some of the earliest surviving examples of Roman literature: the raucous, bawdy and sometimes bewildering world of Roman comedy. Setting the tone for centuries of playwrights (and school curricula), Plautus and Terence came from the margins of Roman society, writing primarily for plebeians and upsetting the conventions they simultaneously established. Plautus’s ‘Menaechmi’ is full of coinages, punning and madcap doubling. Terence’s troubling ‘Hecyra’ tells a much darker story of Roman sexual mores while destabilizing misogynistic stereotypes. Emily and Tom discuss how best to navigate these very early and enormously influential plays, and what they lend to Shakespeare, Sondheim and the modern sitcom.


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Emily Wilson is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and Thomas Jones is an editor at the London Review of Books.

Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk



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