This book examines the ways the encounters between modernist theatre
makers and Greek tragedy were constitutive in the modernist experiments
in performance. Through a series of events / instances / poses that
engage visual, literary and performing arts, the modernist love/hate
relationship with classical Greek tragedy is read as contributing to a
modernist notion of theatricality, one that follows a double motion,
revising both our understanding of Greek tragedy and of modernism
itself. Isadora Duncan, Edward Gordon Craig, T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, W.
B. Yeats, H. D, and Bertolt Brecht and their various, sometimes
successful sometimes failed experiments in creating a modernist
aesthetic in performing, dancing, translating, designing Greek
tragedies, sometimes for the stage and sometimes for the page, are
presented as radical experiments in and gestures towards the autonomy of
performance. In the process the artists of the theatre themselves - the
actor, the designer, the director, the playwright - are reconfigured and
given a lineage and genealogy, through this modernist revision of
tragedy and the tragic not as as a philosophical or philological
tradition, but as a performance practice.