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Chapter 13 - Adaptation and the Transtextual Palimpsest

Anne Carson’s Antigonick as a Textual/Visual Hybrid*

from Part II - Adaptation on the Page and on the Stage

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2021

Vayos Liapis
Affiliation:
Open University of Cyprus
Avra Sidiropoulou
Affiliation:
Open University of Cyprus
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Summary

Ostensibly a translation of Sophocles' Antigone, Anne Carson's Antigonick (2012) is in fact a genre-bending, hybrid construct which defies boundaries. It is a crossbreed between translation, adaptation, and rewriting, as well as between text and image. It incorporates a great variety of discourse types and literary or paraliterary genres, and amalgamates hand-inked blocks of text with original colour drawings (by Bianca Stone). This 'transtextual palimpsest' engages in a fascinating dialogue not only with Sophocles' Antigone but also with its translators and commentators, as well as with authors as disparate as Hegel, Beckett, Brecht, Butler, and Irigaray. At times provocative, stirring, funny, and often all of the above, Carson's Antigonick asks us to push the boundaries of genre, textuality, and visuality towards a new synthesis, which may capture something of the unity of speech, visuality, music, and movement that Greek drama managed to achieve.

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Adapting Greek Tragedy
Contemporary Contexts for Ancient Texts
, pp. 355 - 388
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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