Contextualising Greek poetry and its performance
Submitting Institution
University College LondonUnit of Assessment
ClassicsSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Language, Communication and Culture: Cultural Studies, Literary Studies
History and Archaeology: Historical Studies
Summary of the impact
Research at UCL has underpinned two significant activities which bring
our work to students, non-traditional learners and the wider world: the
UCL Greek play and the programme of events surrounding the London
Olympics. These exemplify the profound public impact of our research in
Greek performed poetry in its social context. Each year, almost 2,000
people attend the Greek play, along with workshops and lectures about
staging, interpretation, and the play's relationship to its social and
historical context. The research also informed the development of a
collaborative programme of cultural events celebrating the 2012 Olympics,
with emphasis on the festival's ancient roots. Open lectures, workshops,
debates, interviews and exhibitions were supplemented by websites, which
increased the range of our educational and public information impacts by
sharing research-led activities with thousands more people.
Underpinning research
UCL Greek & Latin has a long-established research expertise in Greek
performance culture, with particular emphasis on performed text as a
response to social-historical contexts and as medium for articulating,
exploring or challenging the collective value system, as well as in the
subsequent receptions and continuities of that performance culture. Our
research interests coalesce around theatre and athletic
success/celebration. Staff (past and present) who have published key items
in this area include: Peter Agócs (at UCL 2012-2013), Rosa Andújar
(2012-2013), Emmanuela Bakola (2007-2012), Chris Carey (2003-2013), Pat
Easterling (1987-1994), Simon Hornblower (1997-2010), Stephen Instone
(1993-2009), Miriam Leonard (2007-2013), Herwig Maehler (1993-2013),
Malcolm Willcock (1993-2006).
As well as providing vital infrastructure for teaching at secondary and
tertiary levels nationally and internationally through texts and
commentaries (Willcock, Maehler, Instone, Easterling, Carey), our research
has explored the genesis, evolution and demise of genres, their
socio-political context and its impact, the emergence, transmission and
analysis of written texts, and the political and cultural drivers which
shape the processes, nature, pragmatics and dramatics of (re)performance.
This research has particularly illuminated: the dynamics shaping texts and
genre; the ways in which performed poetry (especially lyric and drama)
engages both with the past and with contemporary politics, religion and
values, whether to explore, affirm or contest them; and the ways in which
new cultural contexts and technologies create space for new readings and
effects. The underpinning research base has been strengthened over the
last seven years by the powerful presence in the department of colleagues
researching the processes and theories of classical reception (Andújar,
Leonard, Wyke). Their work has helped cement the diachronic sense of
impact on and in social, political and intellectual context(s) across time
and cultures.
Bakola's research at UCL has expanded our knowledge of fifth century
Athenian comedy as competition, politics, intertext and performance and
has been part of a major development (in which this department has played
a significant role) which uses lost texts and authors to reconstitute the
world of ancient theatre. She has shown the ways in which ideas of wealth
are linked in comedy and tragedy to the dynamics of social and political
change and to larger/deeper (still live) issues of environment and man's
place in it [see b in section 3]. Carey has explored the complex fictive
world (especially in its political dimension) created by tragedy in the
imaginative and performative space between early Greek heroic epic and the
theatre of fifth century Athens [c], and the new use to which the athletic
victory song, originally destined for the elite of the Greek world, was
put in the performative context of the dramatic festivals of democratic
Athens [d]. The latter was included in a volume edited at UCL by Agócs and
Carey with Richard Rawles, which traced the re-use of the victory ode in
contexts from fifth century Greece through Augustan Rome to Greek
independence and twentieth century Europe and America. Agócs [a] examines
how the Pindaric victory ode fictionalises its own performance as
convivial procession (komos) within the fluid semantics of the term
and the larger cultural dynamics of performance modes. Hornblower's
collection explores poetry and the games from a multi-disciplinary angle
[g], including in a chapter by Carey on the logistics of performance.
Leonard's research has mapped the formative impact of Athens in modern
Europe from the enlightenment to the late twentieth century and forms the
background for her exploration [e, f] of the complex continuing relation
between Greek tragedy and ideas of the tragic and philosophy and
psychoanalysis, which formed the basis of her inaugural lecture [3,
section 5].
References to the research
[a] Peter Agócs, `Performance and Genre: Reading Pindar's Komoi',
in P. Agócs/ C. Carey /R. Rawles (eds.), Reading the Victory Ode,
Cambridge 2012, 191-223. Submitted to REF2.
[b] Emmanuela Bakola, `Crime and Punishment: Cratinus on Aeschylus, on
the Metaphysics and on the Politics of Wealth', in E. Bakola/ L.
Prauscello/ M. Telò (eds.), Greek Comedy and the Discourse of Genres,
Cambridge 2013, 226-255. Available on request.
[c] Chris Carey, `The political world of Homer and tragedy', Aevum
Antiquum N.S. 3 (2003, published 2007), 463-484. Available on
request.
[d] Chris Carey, `The victory ode in the theatre' in P. Agócs/ C. Carey
/R. Rawles (eds.), Receiving the komos, London 2013, 17-36.
Submitted to REF2.
[e] Miriam Leonard, `Tragedy and the Seductions of Philosophy', Cambridge
Classical Journal 58 (2012), 145-164. DOI 10.1017/S1750270512000048.
[f] Miriam Leonard, `Freud and Tragedy: Oedipus and the Gender of the
Universal', Classical Receptions Journal 5 (2012), 63-83.
Submitted to REF2.
[g] Simon Hornblower (with C. Morgan), ed. Pindar's Poetry: Patrons,
and Festivals, Oxford 2007. Available on request.
The books and essays listed above underwent rigorous peer review before
publication.
Details of the impact
The department's collective and collaborative research in Greek
performance culture and its continuity into the modern era feeds directly
into its design and delivery of a wide-ranging programme of community
activities. These are intended to engage the public with
socio-political issues arising from our research, enrich the cultural
life of London, and enhance tourist and visitor experience of the
Capital. They are exemplified by the longstanding annual production of a
Greek play at the UCL Bloomsbury Theatre and one-off events such as those
surrounding the London Olympics in 2012. We have energetically seized the
opportunities presented by new technologies to extend the reach of
the impacts on public awareness of and engagement with such issues.
Digitising and sharing the outcomes of these events has allowed the
department to extend the range of its impacts to include the development
and provision of reusable information and learning resources for
independent study and for use in secondary schools and in courses at HEIs
in the UK and beyond and to enhance the accessibility of its research to a
wider public audience.
The Greek Play
The UCL Greek play has run for over 25 years. It functions as an
important medium for increasing public understanding of research on Greek
poetry and performance and its applications to contemporary performance.
Since 2008 we have staged: Aeschylus' Agamemnon 2008;
Aristophanes' Frogs 2009; Aeschylus' Libation Bearers and
Eumenides 2010; Aristophanes' Lysistrata 2011; Euripides' Hippolytus
2012; Euripides' Trojan Women February 2013 (see [2] in section
5). Although the play is produced by students, staff researching Greek
drama oversee its choice of play and translation and advise on
interpretation and stagecraft, ensuring that current research is embedded
into the performance and in programme notes contributed by them. The
innovative and engaging results of their contributions can be seen, for
instance, in the (2013) location of Trojan Women (overseen by Rosa
Andújar) in a modern war zone, whose setting paralleled the fluid relation
between Euripides' production, heroic myth and events of the Peloponnesian
War (see Carey [c]), and in the acclaimed Oresteia productions.
Emmanuela Bakola used her groundbreaking UCL research in Greek literature
and the environment [b] to underpin a production combining themes
uncovered by her work (the house, the earth, the economics of peace and
war, material waste). These were reflected in the play's publicity poster
(the perverted circle of nature and the chthonic associations of the
snake, a recurrent image in the trilogy), acting (contact with the soil in
Agamemnon and Libation Bearers), costume (the Erinyes as
vampires), props and space [2]. The end result was a holistic sense of a
play rooted in its political, religious, theatrical-spatial and literary
milieu. All of this was underpinned and supplemented by research-based
programme notes.
The plays are accompanied by talks for general audiences by
(especially UCL) academics, and workshops with theatre practitioners, with
generous funding initially from the Hellenic Society and the Classical
Association, and now supported by an earmarked award from the Leventis
Foundation. The talks and workshops explore issues of performance and the
relevance and meaning of ancient drama in the modern world. The reach
is demonstrated by the large audiences that the performances themselves
(1935 for Trojan Women 2013, 1879 for Hippolytus 2012) and
the accompanying lectures and workshops attract (308 at 2013 lectures, 60
at workshops — see [2] below). Participants in these events include
members of the public and school groups (students of English, modern
languages, theatre studies or drama as well as Greek or Classical
Civilisation) from many parts of the UK. The significance of this
impact is demonstrated by the positive critical reviews [1] which the
productions have received (`the UCL Classical Drama Society's production
[of Hyppolytus was] explosive' - Matthew Parris, Times
16/02/12, `superior to quite a few more lauded professional productions' -
Tony Keen on our 2008 Agamemnon). Extensive audience feedback
attests to the ways in which research-led performance and outreach both
(re)shapes perception and enriches education. Sample comments from the
public have included:
`showed that however much times have changed over the last couple of
thousand years, the suffering and cruelty of war continues';
`made sense of the conventions of Greek tragedy';
`excellent lecture; accessible and thought provoking; good experience for
my daughter of being in a "uni lecture"`;
`provided such a detailed insight into the major themes and characters,
and the impact this would have had on the society the play was first
performed to';
(and from teachers specifically):
`challenged them [visiting students] to revisit the play and their
existing interpretations';
`very pleased that the lecture did not just deal with the text, but
extended the students' knowledge by looking at the role of women and
mourning'. ([2] below)
The play website [2] supplements these educational benefits by providing
research-driven interviews, images and clips, a blog, programme notes,
essays on the plays, suggestions for further reading and study questions.
Through these media, we extend the impact of the event beyond those
watching the performance itself via an educational resource available to
everyone, allowing wider audiences (inter)nationally to engage with Greek
plays as living theatre. This reach is extended further by related
(digitised) events such as Miriam Leonard's inaugural (Tragedy and
Modernity [3]), broadcast in Australia.
London Olympics 2012
A rare opportunity to improve public understanding of Greek poetry and
performance arose thanks to the London Olympics 2012. On the basis of our
longstanding research on athletics and celebration (current: Agócs, Carey,
past: Instone, Hornblower, Maehler) we took the lead in creating a
consortium of London cultural and educational bodies (also including the
British Museum, Institute of Classical Studies, Sir John Soane's Museum,
Egypt Exploration Society, British Academy, Petrie Museum, Hellenic and
Roman societies, Open University, Kings College London) to create a major
programme of activities and exhibitions around the London Olympics 2012 on
the theme of sport and competition in the ancient world and in its modern
receptions and renewals. As well as co-ordinating events in the capital,
we used the Roman Society website [4] as a portal for research-based
Olympic themed activities throughout Britain to showcase Classics research
nationally. The reach of this impact is demonstrated by the many
and varied audiences around the country who benefited from engagement
(either through live events or resultant video uploads), from the research
outputs generated, and from the new partnerships formed.
The programme, which ran from May to September 2012, featured three
conferences, public lectures, panel discussions (with audiences of
100-350), exhibitions, guided tours and hands-on activities in museums. It
offered a fuller understanding of the different ways in which competition
(especially but not exclusively athletic) was perceived, enacted and
memorialised in the ancient world and in the modern era, providing a foil
against which to assess contemporary competitions and help them understand
the relevance of the ancient traditions in all areas of culture.
As with the Greek plays, the reach and significance of the impacts of
live events were increased through the creation of digital learning and
information resources. Thus this impact was further enhanced by the Unit's
Ancient Olympics website [6], which is now a permanent research-based
educational resource offering summaries of key issues, related ancient
texts and artefacts, recordings of talks, essays and images on the issues
discussed, as well as suggestions for further reading and study questions.
The reach of this resource is indicated by the fact that it has
been viewed some 1200 times during the impact assessment period; its significance
as an educational resource is suggested by user comments such as `I plan
to use it with my GCSE group', and `a superb resource' [6]. It is now
being further developed in collaboration with schoolteachers and pupils.
The educational and public information impacts of the events were enhanced
and extended still further by the publication of a full set of the public
lectures on the website of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic
Studies, where they were viewed c. 2200 times during the impact assessment
period [5].
Chris Carey also gave invited public lectures on the sociology and
ethnicity of athletics and the nature of ancient competition to audiences
of 50-300 at associated events in Exeter, Nottingham, Dublin and London
and at a follow-up seminar on law and sport in October 2013 for a legal
and public audience at the Institute of Directors in London, organised by
the Middle Temple. He was invited to provide a voiceover for an internet
film (which included Olympic athletes) by the Guardian newspaper
([9]; blog comment: `very professional; impressive...'). He was also
invited to produce a blog post for Cambridge Press, which had 6,225 unique
visits (11,050 total visits) by late October 2013, making it the 3rd
most popular blog post on the Cambridge Journals blog, of 260 posts across
all disciplines; the only posts with more visits were promotional posts
[7]. Carey also took part in a public discussion on sport at UCL with
celebrated neuroscientist Semir Zeki for an audience of 150. A video of
that discussion is now available online [8] and had received 900 views by
October 2013.
Sources to corroborate the impact
[1] Reviews of performances by Tony Keen (2010) http://bit.ly/1cESPlg,
and Matthew Parris in the Times (2012), available online at http://bit.ly/HWQKI1.
[2] See Greek Play website: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/classics/classical-play/archive
and compilation of quantitative and qualitative evidence for the impact of
the Greek play at: http://goo.gl/wmcbNS.
[3] Video and blog of Leonard inaugural: http://bit.ly/1fRJ0mo
and a related radio broadcast on Australian radio (November 2012): http://ab.co/1fRJ1GZ.
[4] Roman Society website with list of events arranged to accompany the
London Olympics: http://bit.ly/1cESUFJ.
[5] Hellenic Society website and YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/18M2qUS.
[6] See Olympics website: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/classics/engagement/the_ancient_olympics
and qualitative evaluations from schoolteachers available online at: http://goo.gl/BfA3w9
[7] CUP Olympics blog (August 2012) http://bit.ly/1jiWqYt.
Statement on visitors to this blog post provided by the Senior Marketing
Executive, Cambridge University Press.
[8] Zeki-Carey conversation on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1ircda8.
[9] Guardian video on the Olympics with voiceover by Carey (July 2012): http://bit.ly/1ddXPCv.