Aristophanes(I)
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Ancient Greek poet and comic dramatist Aristophanes was the son of
Philippus of Athens. A leading exponent of the Athenian "Old Comedy,"
Aristophanes lived most of his life during the Peloponnesian War
against Sparta (431-404). Some of his works include "Acharnians" (425),
"Knights" (424), "In the Clouds" (423), "In the Wasps" (422), "The
Peace" (421), "The Birds" (414), "In Lysistrata" (411), "The
Thesmophoriazusae" (411), "In the Frogs" (405; it won the first prize
at the Lenaean festival), "In the Ecclesiazusae" (392) and "In the
Plutus" (388). He is the only exponent of the Athenian Old Comedy who
has left us complete plays. In his day comic plays were performed at
Athens annually at the festivals of Dionysus and Lenaea, at which
occasions five poets competed, each producing a single play. The
targets of Aristophanes' humor includes notable politicians (Pericles,
Cleon, Hyperbolus), poets (Euripides) and
philosophers (Socrates), to name a
few. Aristophanes often makes fun of cultural innovators (although the
construction of his plays shows that he was one of them himself),
whereas the characters with whom he expresses sympathy are usually
people who just want to be left to enjoy themselves in traditional
ways.