Eschilo: testo, scena, tradizione
open access | peer reviewed-
edited by
- Margherita Nimis - Università degli Studi di Verona, Italia - email
- Francesca Chenet - Università degli Studi di Verona, Italia - email
Abstract
This volume brings together nine papers originally presented at the seminar Aeschylean Tragedy, held at the University of Verona in June 2025 within the framework of the PRIN 2022 project Aeschylean Tragedy. Text, Hypotexts, Performance (P.I.: Enrico Medda, University of Pisa). Authored by early-career scholars, the essays examine the interplay between text, interpretation, and performance in Aeschylus’ works. Employing a range of methodological approaches, they address key issues in philology, literary criticism, reception studies, and performance studies.
Keywords Herodotus • Ares • Suppliant Women • Seven Against Thebes • Intertextuality • Aeschylus’ modern reception • Euripides • Timotheus • Aeschylus • Identity and the Other • Suppliants • Responsibility • Honour • Fragment 78 Maehler • Seven against Thebes • Otherness • Textual criticism • Hybridity • Performance • Persian Wars • Philological conjectures • Stefan George-Kreis • Fragments 76-7 Maehler • Late classical lyric • Persians • Pindar’s Pythian 1 • Cognitive Psychology • Homer • Phoenician Women • Attic Tragedy • Inscriptions and epigrams • Redress • Twentieth-century Germany • Emotions onstage • Monsters and the Monstrous • Aeschylus’ Persae • Ancient Interpolations • Tragic imagery • War • Imagery • Revenge • Stichomythia • Reception • Oresteia • Tragic diction
e-ISBN 979-12-5742-025-3 | ISBN (PRINT) 979‑12‑5742‑034‑5 | Published Feb. 27, 2026 | Language en, it
Copyright © 2026 Margherita Nimis, Francesca Chenet. This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.