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Subject: Classics  Book Title: The Dance of the Muses
The Dance of the Muses
Choral Theory and Ancient Greek Poetics
David, A. P. , Assistant Professor, European College of Liberal Arts, Berlin
Print publication date: 2006
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2007
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-929240-0
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199292400.001.0001
 
Abstract: This book develops an authentic and revolutionary musical analysis of ancient Greek poetry. It brings the interpretation of ancient verse into step with the sorts of analyses customarily enjoyed by works in all the more recent poetical and musical traditions. It departs from the abstract metrical analyses of the past in that it conceives the rhythmic and harmonic elements of poetry as integral to the whole expression, and decisive in the interpretation of its meaning. Such an analysis is now possible because of a new theory of the Greek tonic accent, set out in the third chapter, and its application to Greek poetry understood as choreia — the proper name for the art and work of ancient poets in both epic and lyric, described by Plato as a synthesis of dance rhythm and vocal harmony, in disagreement moving toward agreement. The book offers a thorough-going treatment of Homeric poetics: here some remarkable discoveries in the harmonic movement of epic verse, when combined with some neglected facts about the origin of the hexameter in a ‘dance of the Muses’, lead to essential new thinking about the genesis and the form of Homeric poetry. The book also gives a foretaste of the fruits to be harvested in lyric by a musical analysis, applying the new theory of the accent and considering concretely the role of dance in performance.

Keywords: ancient Greek poetry, metre, metrical analysis, rhythm, harmony, choreia, epic, lyric, Plato, Homer
Table of Contents
Preface
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1. Introduction: The Right Comparison
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2. Choreia and the Musical Text
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3. The Voice of the Dancer: A New Theory of the Greek Accent
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4. The Form of the Hexameter: The Origins of Caesura and Diaeresis
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5. The ‘Choral Signifier’: The Shaping of Homeric Speech
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6. Retrogression, Episode, and Anagogy: The Round Dance and Narrative Form
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7. The Genesis of Homeric Poetry (a Brief Synthesis): The ‘Intemporizing’ Cataloguer
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8. The Lyric Orchestra
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199292400.001.0001
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