Lexington Books
Pages: 130
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-3020-0 • Hardback • September 2016 • $98.00 • (£75.00)
978-1-4985-3021-7 • eBook • September 2016 • $93.00 • (£72.00)
Madeleine M. Henry is professor of classics and head of the School of Languages and Cultures at Purdue University.
Elisa Rizo is associate professor of Hispanic studies at Iowa State University.
Introduction, by Madeleine Henry and Elia Rizo
Chapter 1: From Cultural Appropriation to Historical Emendation: Two Cases Studies of Receptions of the Classical Tradition in Brazil, by Andrea Kouklanakis
Chapter 2: Black Angel: Classical Myth, Race and Desire in a Brazilian Modernist Play, by Rodrigo Tadeu Gonçalves and Guilherme Gontijo Flores
Chapter 3: Decolonizing Greek Theater: Black Experimental Theater, by César Augusto Baldi
Chapter 4: Changó el gran putas: A Drama of Memory, by John Maddo
Chapter 5: Resurrection of the Dead: Manuel Zapata Olivella’s Caronte Liberado, by Madeleine Henry
Chapter 6: Glocalizing Democracy through a Reception of the Classics in Equatorial Guinean Theatre: The Case of Morgades’ Antígona, by Elisa Rizo
About the Contributors
This isn’t a long book; on the contrary, at a little over one hundred pages, it is a compact collection, and one that offers a strong suggestion of the fruitful scholarship that may result from collaborations by academics from Classics and African Diaspora Studies. Each essay contains a bibliography and notes that inspire readers to explore these lines of inquiry. . . with this study, the series editors have made an important intervention in both disciplines and offer a glimpse of the work to emerge in the coming decades.
— Hispania
Atlantis Otherwise is essential reading for anyone interested in classical receptions in Latin America and the African Diaspora. The essays in Atlantis Otherwise meditate profoundly upon the dynamics of intertextuality, the uses and abuses of classical antiquity, and the politics of exchange in postcolonial contexts. These six case studies are poignant in their investigations of race, national politics, and identity and each is germane to our present socio-political moment. I expect that scholars of classics, Latin American studies, and Africana studies will welcome this volume with enthusiasm.— Jesse Weiner, Hamilton College
This slim yet groundbreaking collection is a prime example of how fruitful and rich in insights a transdisciplinary dialogue can be. Featuring a highly theoretical introduction by its coeditors and six thought-provoking essays written by scholars with superb command of the subject, Atlantis Otherwise comes to expand the field of classical reception beyond its traditional literary, linguistic, and geographical boundaries.— Konstantinos P. Nikoloutsos, St. Joseph's University