This book investigates the idea of comic seriousness in Old Comedy. The
issue has been a vexing one in classical studies, and the most
traditional stance has been that Aristophanes' comedies reflect his
personal ideology, reducing the plays to little more than political
speeches. Riu concludes, in contrast, that we should abandon our
preconceptions about comic seriousness and approach the language of
Aristophanes with care and precision, alert to the nuances of meaning
that the comic genre entails. Attempting to set Old Comedy in its proper
context, Riu explores the myth and ritual of Dionysus in the city-state
(including a reading of Euripides'Bacchae and other sources) and relates
the patterns found in those myths to the works of Aristophanes. The book
concludes with a section on the relationship between comedy and reality,
the import of insults in comedy, comedy as ritual, the relationship
between author and character, and the seriousness of comedy. With an
appendix that examines the exceptional case ofClouds, Dionysism and
Comedy is an important resource for students and scholars of classical
comedy and the comedic genre