Monday, 25 April 2005

Le weekend

Monday, 25 April 2005 09:14
strange_complex: (Apollo Belvedere)
Doctor Who

It actually just gets better and better, doesn't it? I mean: the little pile of M&Ms by the red telephone, the many alternative Tardises and, best of all, the Massive Weapons of Destruction. Did the old Who ever boast such delightful symbolism or topical resonance? I propose from this day forth always to say 'Massive Weapons of Destruction' in everyday conversation rather than 'Weapons of Mass Destruction' in tribute to this weekend's episode.

And if that all weren't enough, we have the Daleks to look forward to next Saturday night. * faints from excitement *

Lysistrata at the Lyric Theatre, Belfast

I went to see this on Saturday evening with my colleague, John Curran, our three MA students and one of their boyfriends. It was OK, but I think I've been rather spoiled by the stunning tragedies put on by the Actors of Dionysus, not to mention a bright and breezy student adaptation of the Birds which I saw while at Oxford, and which had translated all the references to contemporary Athens into references to modern-day Oxford instead. While AoD's tragedies are innovative, fresh adaptations, which offer profound contemporary relevance and stunning choreography and manage to strike at the very core of one's emotional being, and the Oxford Birds at least drew on the real experiences of its cast and crew, Saturday's Lysistrata was merely... average.

A pity, because Aristophanes' writing at the time was incredibly bold and topical, and of course there is plenty of local significance that could have been drawn out of a play between two warring communities whose women decide to draw the conflict to an end themselves by holding a sex strike. But the attempts made to do so were half-hearted, the translation sounded suspiciously to me like what I remember of the Penguin one, and many of the lines came across as simply being spoken: not meant. This will probably sound like the most snobbish thing I've ever said, but it felt... provincial.

Still, it was nice to go out with our students, and I'm sure we did much to promote intra-departmental bonding in the process. And I enjoyed some very nice pan-fried duck with a summer fruits sauce in a bistro where we ate before the performance. So by no means a wasted evening.

Poxy Papyri

Monday, 25 April 2005 14:48
strange_complex: (Apollo Belvedere)
Those who are based in the Oxford area and are interested in the new texts deciphered from the Oxyrhynchus archive might like to see this lecture notice which I received today by email:


"The feature in the Independent on Sunday on 17 April has attracted a lot of interest, and Dr Dirk Obbink has agreed to give a follow-up lecture / seminar on these exciting developments. The title is:

'Last Tangle on Paros: A New Image of Archilochos'

and it will be given on Monday 16 May at 5 o'clock in the Harris Lecture Theatre, Oriel College. All are welcome."


The original Independent on Sunday article is linked in my previous post on this subject, but is now available in full only to online subscribers. However, the Papyrology team have now updated their web site to include their own page on the new discoveries.

I'm grinding my teeth that I can't go, but I'm not mean enough not to pass this on to others who can!

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