Rehearsals of Manhood

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A01=John J. Winkler
Aeolus
Ancient Greek comedy
Ancient Greek novel
Aristophanes
Aristotle
Athens
Atreus
Author_John J. Winkler
Banality (sculpture series)
Bribery
Categorization
Category=AFKP
Category=NHC
Chryses
Classics
Clothing
Cockfight
Combatant
Costume
Cowardice
Demosthenes
Depiction
Description
Desertion
Dithyramb
Eion
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Euripides
Explanation
Fellow
forthcoming
Greek tragedy
Hetaira
Hoplite
Human sacrifice
Illustration
Imitation
Impersonator
Iphigenia
Joan Collins
Joke
Literature
Musical instrument
Narrative
Narrativity
Newspaper
Odysseus
Old Comedy
Opsis
Oropos
Palmette
Phratry
Pity
Playwright
Poetics (Aristotle)
Poetry
Scholia
Seriousness
Sextus Empiricus
Single combat
Social distance
Socrates
Sophocles
The Bacchae
The Comic
Theatre of ancient Greece
Thyestes
Tragedy
Trickster
Usage
Walter Burkert
War
Wealth
Writing
Xanthos

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691240954
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A bold reconception of ancient Greek drama by one of the most brilliant and original classical scholars of his generation

When John Winkler died in 1990, he left an unpublished manuscript containing a highly original interpretation of the development and meaning of ancient Greek drama. Rehearsals of Manhood makes this groundbreaking work available for the first time, presenting an entirely novel picture of Greek tragedy and a vivid portrait of the cultural poetics of Athenian manhood.

Ancient Athens was a military conclave as well as an urban capital, and male citizens were expected to embody the ideal of the Athenian citizen-soldier. Winkler understands Attic drama as a secular manhood ritual, a collaborative aesthetic and civic enterprise focused on the initiation of boys into manhood and the training, testing, and representation of young male warriors. Past efforts to discover the origins and development of Greek tragedy have largely treated drama as a literary genre, isolating it from other Athenian social practices. Winkler returns Greek tragedy to its social context, showing how it was one among many forms of display and performance cultivated by elite males in ancient Greece.

The final work of a celebrated classical scholar, Rehearsals of Manhood highlights the civic function of the dramatic festivals at classical Athens as occasions for the examination and representation of boys on the verge of manhood, and offers a fresh explanation of how dramatic performance fit into the social life and gender politics of the Athenian state.

John J. Winkler (1943–1990) was professor of classics at Stanford University. His books include The Constraints of Desire: The Anthropology of Sex and Gender in Ancient Greece and Auctor & Actor: A Narratological Reading of Apuleius's "The Golden Ass."

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