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Dancing with Philoctetes: Reflections on Pain and Remembrance

Abigail Akavia

Published on December 15, 2023 by punctum books

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Pages
116 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-140-5 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-141-2 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2023951719
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: PER011030, PER011040
Thema subject codes
THEMA: ATDF, DBSG

Abandoned by his community, doomed to a solitary existence with his voice as sole companion: can Sophocles’ Philoctetes still speak to us? What do his screams have to say?

Dancing with Philoctetes: Reflections on Pain and Remembrance juxtaposes a new adaptation of Sophocles’ play with an essay describing the process of bringing it to life in a world on the brink of a pandemic. Akavia investigates Sophocles’ nuanced portrayal of the fragility of empathy in the face of suffering, and also shares the challenges of embodying and vocalizing Sophocles’ text onstage. She proposes that the pandemic and its aftermath offer a renewed perspective on Philoctetes’ thematization, not just of empathy and disease, but of the longing to return: to home, to health, to what memory holds.

Akavia’s treatment of Philoctetes starts out from his body and voice and journeys on to loneliness, toxic masculinity, nostalgia, cancer, dreaming, parenthood, language, ballet lessons, siblings, music, and growing up. Here, scholarship and creative non-fiction combine to tell a story of reading, performing, thinking about, and living (through) tragedy.

Listen to Abigail Akavia reflecting on her adaptation of Philoctetes on TangentCast:

Biographies

  • Abigail Akavia

    (Author)

    Abigail Akavia is a scholar and theater practitioner based in Germany. She holds a PhD in Classical Languages and Literatures from the University of Chicago, with a dissertation on the poetics of listening in Sophocles, and has worked onstage and behind the scenes in theaters in Israel, Chicago, and Leipzig. She is particularly drawn to re-imagining ancient Greek narratives and other narratives of trauma through non-literal media such as music, dance, sound, and images.

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Genres

  • Autotheory
  • Literary Studies
  • Premodern

Keywords

  • contemporary performance practice
  • disability
  • dramaturgy
  • embodiment
  • empathy
  • Greek tragedy
  • grief
  • Philoctetes
  • Sophocles
  • theater
  • translation
  • voice