Dall'estetica all'etica del brutto: tre 'personae de mimo' nelle orazioni ciceroniane

Caterina Di Giuseppe*

*Autore corrispondente per questo lavoro

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo in rivistaArticolo in rivistapeer review

Abstract

This article examines some Ciceronian witnesses from three different speeches in which Cicero refers to three of the main characters in the contemporary sociopolitical context, portraying them as mimic actors and actresses. These three characters are not professional actors, but on the stage of life they act as if they were: the first is Mark Antony, who in the Philippcs is not only flanked by mimic actors, but in some accounts seems to play their role himself; then comes Clodia, who in the Pro Caelio is depicted as archimima, a figure who held both for the roles of protagonist and director of the mimic plays; the last character analyzed is a collective character, the Alexandrian ambassadors, who in the Pro Rabirio Postumo are portrayed in mimic and gestural attitudes similar to those of actors. The aim of the article will be to show that Cicero uses the comparison with mimes in a degrading way and, consequently, that in the portrayal of these characters as actors can be seen an ethical extension of Aristotle’s aesthetic theory of comedy.
Titolo tradotto del contributo[Autom. eng. transl.] From Aesthetics to the Ethics of Uglyness: Three 'Personae de Mimo' in Ciceronian Orations
Lingua originaleItalian
pagine (da-a)31-58
Numero di pagine28
RivistaCiceroniana On Line
VolumeVII
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2023
Pubblicato esternamente

Keywords

  • Cicero
  • Cicerone
  • Mimic actors
  • Roman mime
  • Roman oratory
  • attori di mimo
  • degradazione etica
  • ethical degradation
  • mimo romano
  • oratoria romana

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