This research project aims to explore Plato’s rich and nuanced treatment of Greek comedy. In recent years there have been a number of high quality publications on a variety of topics related to Plato and comedy. These works have often been more narrow in their focus, and fall within the contemporary disciplinary boundaries of either philosophy or classics. This is perhaps understandable given that lacking in the Platonic dialogues are the kinds of sustained treatments of comedy that we find for tragedy and epic. But yet, as this recent scholarship has shown, engagements with comedy, comic poets, as well as comic vignettes, tropes, and all manner of comic ‘business’ litter the dialogues.
This project aims to offer the first systematic investigation of Plato engagement with comedy. This project will take a uniquely interdisciplinary approach to this issue, and will include both philosophers and classicists who work on topics including Plato’s poetics, the wider philosophical reception of comedy, and comedy itself. In doing so we hope to illuminate the scope and complexity of Plato’s treatment of comedy, and situate Plato’s treatment of comedy within a broader history of development of the comic tradition, and its reception.
‘Plato on Comedy’ Workshop Programme:
Birley Room, Hatfield College, Durham University
March 30th-31st 2019
Saturday the 30th of March
9:30-10 Welcome
10:00-11:00 Prof. Franco Trivigno (Oslo)
‘Plato’s Definition of Comedy’
11:00-12:00 Assoc. Prof. Pierre Destrée (Louvain)
‘Plato and the Art of Parodying Tragedies’
12:00-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:30 Mr. William Strigel (Trinity College Dublin)
‘Plato’s Comic Principles: On the Ascetic Socrates’
14:30-15:30 Prof. Richard Hunter (Cambridge)
‘Alcibiades the Laughter-Maker’
15:30-16:00 Tea Break
16:00-17:00 Assoc. Prof. Sonja Tanner (Colorado)
‘Socrates’ Imaginary Ridicule: Laughter in Plato’s Hippias Major’
17:00 Reception
19:00 Dinner
Sunday the 31st of March
9:00-10:00 Dr. Sarah Miles (Durham)
‘Platonicomic Business: Platonic Dialogue and Comic Drama’
10:00-11:00 Dr. Dave Preston (London)
‘Arrogance, Asininity, and Alazoneia: Plato in the Fragments of Middle Comedy’
11:00-11:30 Tea Break
11:30-12:30 Dr. Alan Roberts (Sussex)
‘Humour is a Funny Thing’
12:30-13:00 Concluding Statements
Plato on Comedy
Departmental Research Project 2018-19
Department of Classics and Ancient History
Durham University
Email: plato.oncomedy@durham.ac.uk
Website: dur.ac.uk/platooncomedy/