Debate concerning the extent to which the tragic chorus is marginal to
the dramatic action has prevailed in discussions of choral identity and,
more broadly, Greek tragedy as a whole, since the time of Aristotle.
Furthermore, it is supposed that choruses not tied to the role of
Athenian military-age men are all the more marginal. Yet choral identity
challenges our understanding of the ancient Greek tragic chorus--and
thus of Greek tragedy as a whole--because the dramatic identities of
tragic choruses are, with few exceptions, so different from the
identities of the plays' external audiences. Choral Identity and the
Chorus of Elders in Greek Tragedy presents U.S. Dhuga's radical
reappraisal of the ancient Greek tragic chorus. Through a close reading
of the speech, song, and choreography among choruses of old men, Dhuga
overturns previous assumptions about the chorus of elders, arguing that
their decrepitude and supposed low social rank resulted in the
historically dismissive view of the chorus of elders. This book
demonstrates that choruses of elders are instead remarkably central to
the tragic action. Dhuga guides us through detailed yet readable
analyses of the choruses in Sophocles' Oedipus Coloneus and Antigone,
Euripides' Heraclidae and Hercules Furens, and Aeschylus' Agamemnon.
Through these works, Dhuga broadens our understanding of the ongoing, if
not increasing, importance that the chorus commands in Greek tragedy.
Choral Identity and the Chorus of Elders in Greek Tragedy is a must-read
for anyone who wants a more complete understanding of the power and
complexity of Greek tragedy.