Performance and Cure Drama and Healing in Ancient Greece and Contemporary America

Sale price  $34.16 Regular price  $37.95

Reliable shipping

Flexible returns

Classical Inter/Faces

Performance and Cure

Drama and Healing in Ancient Greece and Contemporary America

Karelisa V. Hartigan | Susanna Braund | Paul Cartledge

Drama / General

In this fascinating addition to the Classical Inter/faces series, Karelisa V. Hartigan suggests that drama was regularly performed in the theatres built within or adjacent to the ancient sanctuaries of Asklepios. She argues that a pageant which showed the enactment of the god healing prompted the dream therapy the patient experienced at the sanctuary. Patients who viewed this drama were ready to receive the nightly ministrations of the deity, his attendants and his animals while they slept in the dormitory at the Asklepieion.

To support her thesis, Hartigan discusses the mind-body relationship in the healing process, a relationship the medical profession is beginning to recognize. She concludes by presenting first-hand material based on her experience doing Playback Theatre for patients at Shands Hospital at the University of Florida. In performing improvisational scenes at bedside or in a community space, she has witnessed how the mini-dramas lift the patients' spirits and offer them hope for a successful outcome to their illness.

Karelisa V. Hartigan is Professor Emerita of Classics at the University of Florida, USA. She is the author of Muse on Madison Avenue: Classical Myth in Contemporary Advertising (2002), Greek Tragedy on the American Stage (1995), Ambiguity & Self-Deception: The Apollo & Artemis Plays of Euripides (1991) and The Poets and the Cities (1979).

Publication Date: 21 May 2009
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: Bristol Classical Press
ISBN-13: 9780715636398
Format: Paperback softback
Page Count: 144
Weight (oz): 7.36

You may also like