首页
登录
职称英语
"Looking at Theatre History" → One of the primary ways
"Looking at Theatre History" → One of the primary ways
游客
2025-02-06
11
管理
问题
"Looking at Theatre History"
→ One of the
primary
ways of approaching the Greek theatre is through archeology, the systematic study of material remains such as architecture, inscriptions, sculpture, vase painting, and other forms of decorative art.A Serious on-site excavations began in Greece around 1870, but W. Dörpfeld did not begin the first extensive study of the Theatre of Dionysus until 1886.B Since that time, more than 167 other Greek theatres have been identified and many of them have been excavated. C Nevertheless, they still do not permit us to describe the
precise
appearance of the
skene
(illustrations printed in books are conjectural reconstructions), since many pieces are irrevocably lost because the buildings in later periods became sources of stone for other projects and what remains is usually broken and scattered.D That most of the buildings were remodeled many times has created great problems for those seeking to date both the parts and the successive versions. Despite these drawbacks, archeology provides the most concrete evidence we have about the theatre structures of ancient Greece. But, if they have told us much, archeologists have not completed their work, and many sites have scarcely been touched.
→ Perhaps the most
controversial
use of archeological evidence in theatre history is vase paintings, thousands of which have survived from ancient Greece. (Most of those used by theatre scholars are reproduced in Margarete Bieber’s The History of the Greek and Roman Theatre.) Depicting scenes from mythology and daily life, the vases are the most graphic pictorial evidence we have. But they are also easy to misinterpret. Some scholars have considered any vase that depicts a subject treated in a surviving drama or any scene showing masks, flute players, or ceremonials to be valid evidence of theatrical practice. This is a highly questionable assumption, since the Greeks made widespread use of masks, dances, and music outside the theatre and since the myths on which dramatists drew were known to everyone, including vase painters, who might well depict the same subjects as dramatists without being indebted to them. Those vases showing scenes unquestionably theatrical are few in number.
→ Written evidence about ancient Greek theatre is often treated as less reliable than archeological evidence because most written accounts are separated so far in time from the events they describe and because they provide no information about their own sources. Of the written evidence, the surviving plays are usually treated as the most reliable. But the oldest surviving manuscripts of Greek plays date from around the tenth century, C.E., some 1500 years after they were first performed. Since printing did not exist during this time span, copies of plays had to be made by hand, and therefore the possibility of textual errors creeping in was magnified. Nevertheless, the scripts offer us our readiest access to the cultural and theatrical conditions out of which they came. But these scripts, like other kinds of evidence, are subject to varying interpretations. Certainly performances embodied a male perspective, for example, since the plays were written, selected, staged, and acted by men. Yet the existing plays feature numerous choruses of women and many feature strong female characters. Because these characters often seem victims of their own powerlessness and appear to be governed, especially in the comedies, by sexual desire, some critics have seen these plays as rationalizations by the male-dominated culture for keeping women segregated and cloistered. Other critics, however, have seen in these same plays an attempt by male authors to force their male audiences to examine and call into question this segregation and cloistering of Athenian women.
→ By far the majority of written references to Greek theatre date from several hundred years after the events they report. The writers seldom mention their sources of evidence, and thus we do not know what credence to give
them
. In the absence of material nearer in time to the events, however, historians have used the accounts and have been grateful to have them. Overall, historical treatment of the Greek theatre is something like assembling a jigsaw puzzle from which many pieces are missing: historians arrange what they have and imagine (with the aid of the remaining evidence and logic) what has been lost. As a result, though the broad outlines of Greek theatre history are reasonably clear, many of the details remain open to doubt.
Glossary
skene: a stage building where actors store their masks and change their costumes [br] The word primary in the passage is closest in meaning to
选项
A、reliable
B、important
C、unusual
D、accepted
答案
B
解析
In this passage, important is a synonym for "primary." Context comes from the phrase, "most concrete evidence."
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3945812.html
相关试题推荐
"LookingatTheatreHistory"→Oneoftheprimaryways
"LookingatTheatreHistory"→Oneoftheprimaryways
"LookingatTheatreHistory"→Oneoftheprimaryways
"LookingatTheatreHistory"→Oneoftheprimaryways
"LookingatTheatreHistory"→Oneoftheprimaryways
Throughouthistory______differentrepresentationsfornumbersandforthebasi
EvidencesofHumanHistoryInthestudyofhumanhistory
EvidencesofHumanHistoryInthestudyofhumanhistory
EvidencesofHumanHistoryInthestudyofhumanhistory
EvidencesofHumanHistoryInthestudyofhumanhistory
随机试题
DietandtheDemandforFoodThedemandfordifferentfoodp
[originaltext]SirIsaacNewton,whowasbornin1642andwhodiedin1727,
Acommonassumptionabouttheprivatesectorofeducationisthatitcater
Peoplewithdisabilitiescomprisealargepartofthepopulation.Itis【C1】
为了能按时交付系统,开发小组在实现“确定最优任务分配方案”功能时采用了蛮力的方法
《难经》认为A.右肾为命门 B.命门为两肾的总称 C.两肾之间为命门 D.
患者,男性,28岁,因外出春游出现咳嗽、咳白黏痰伴喘息1天入院,体检:体温36.
扶贫,粗略地说,有两个责任主体。一个是党和政府,另一个是贫困户自身。后者的责任平
2020年1月,赵某、钱某、孙某、李某四人共同出资设立了甲有限责任公司(以下简称
依据《中华人民共和国环境噪声污染防治法》,建设经过已有的噪声敏感建筑物集中区域的
最新回复
(
0
)