Dictionary Definition
dithyrambic adj : of or in the manner of a
dithyramb
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Of, pertaining to, or resembling a dithyramb; especially,
passionate, intoxicated with enthusiasm.
- 1907, William James,
Pragmatism:
- Signor Papini, the leader of italian pragmatism, grows fairly dithyrambic over the view that it opens, of man's divinely-creative functions.
- 1985, Paul Binding, Harmonica's Bridegroom http://books.google.com/books?id=tabbzcV5ej8C,
ISBN 0552991384, page 131:
- ... thighs appear to be continuously alighting and pausing in mid-air, detached from their dithyrambic owners, like luminous birds on the wing.
- 2000, Ian C. Johnston, The Birth of Tragedy http://books.google.com/books?id=ufCCJUFo-LMC
by Friedrich Nietzsche, page 104:
- The dithyrambic chorus is a chorus of transformed people, for whom their social past, their civic position, is entirely forgotten.
- 2005, William Forbes Gray, Some Old Scots Judges: Anecdotes and
Impressions http://books.google.com/books?id=zY-1gt20e-EC,
ISBN 1584774967, page 25:
- Nevertheless, if one has time and, still more, the patience to search whole acres of dithyrambic prose, he shall have his reward.
- 1907, William James,
Pragmatism:
Noun
- A dithyramb.
- 1775, Anonymous, review of the West translation of Pindar's
Olympic Odes, in The Critical Review, volume 40, http://books.google.com/books?id=ZB8FAAAAYAAJ
page 451,
- As we have no remains of the dithyrambics of the ancients, we cannot exactly ascertain the measure.
- 1775, Anonymous, review of the West translation of Pindar's
Olympic Odes, in The Critical Review, volume 40, http://books.google.com/books?id=ZB8FAAAAYAAJ
page 451,
Extensive Definition
The dithyramb was originally an ancient
Greek hymn sung to the god Dionysus. Its wild
and ecstatic character was contrasted by Plutarch with that
of the paean. Dithyrambos
seems to have arisen out of this song: just as paean was both a
hymn to and a title of Apollo, Dithyrambos
was an epithet of
Dionysus as well as a song in his honor. Greeks recognized in the
epithet "he of the miraculous birth" and constructed an etymology to confirm this.
According to Aristotle, the
dithyramb was the origin of the Ancient
Greek theatre, and one may recognize as a dithyramb the chorus
invoking Dionysus in Euripides'
The
Bacchae. Plato, in The Laws,
discussing various kinds of music, mentions "the birth of Dionysos,
called, I think, the dithyramb".
Form
In Athens dithyrambs were sung by a Greek chorus of up to fifty men or boys dancing in circular formation (there is no certain evidence that they may have originally been dressed as satyrs) and probably accompanied by the aulos. They would normally relate some incident in the life of Dionysus. The leader of the chorus later became the solo protagonist, with lyrical interchanges taking place between him and the rest of the chorus.Competitions between groups singing dithyrambs
were an important part of festivals such as the Dionysia and
Lenaia. Each
tribe would enter two choruses, one of men and one of boys, each
under the leadership of a choragos. The results of
dithyrambic contests in Athens were recorded with the names of the
winning teams and choregoi recorded but not the poets, most of whom
remain unknown. The successful choregos would receive a statue
which would be erected - at his own expense - on a public monument
to commemorate his group's victory.
History
The first dithyrambs were composed in Athens around the seventh century BC. Their inspiration is unknown, although it was possibly non-Greek, as the word is of unknown but probably non-Greek derivation. The form soon spread to other Greek city-states, and dithyrambs were composed by the poets Simonides, Pindar, and Bacchylides (only the latter's works have survived in anything like their original form). Later examples were dedicated to other gods but the dithyramb subsequently was developed (traditionally by Arion) into a literary form. According to Aristotle, it evolved into the Greek tragedy, and dithyrambs continued to be developed alongside tragedies for some time. The clearest sense of dithyramb as proto-tragedy comes from a surviving dithyramb by Bacchylides 1 2, though it was composed after tragedy had already developed more fully; as a dialogue between a single actor and a chorus, it is suggestive of what tragedy may have resembled before Aeschylus added a second actor. By the 4th century BC the genre was in decline, although the dithyrambic competitions did not come to an end until well after the Roman takeover of Greece.Dithyrambic compositions have rarely been written
in English,
although one notable exception is Alexander's Feast by John Dryden
(written 1697). A wildly
enthusiastic speech or piece of writing is still occasionally
described as dithyrambic.
Footnotes
References
- Pickard-Cambridge, Sir Arthur Wallace
- Dithyramb, Tragedy, and Comedy , 1927.
- The Theatre of Dionysus in Athens, 1946.
- The Dramatic Festivals of Athens, 1953.
- Sourvinou-Inwood, Christiane, Tragedy and Athenian Religion, Oxford University Press, 2003.
- Wiles, David, The Masked Menander: Sign and Meaning in Greek and Roman Performance, 1991.
dithyrambic in German: Dithyrambus
dithyrambic in Modern Greek (1453-):
Διθύραμβος
dithyrambic in Spanish: Ditirambo
dithyrambic in Esperanto: Ditirambo
dithyrambic in French: Dithyrambe
dithyrambic in Croatian: Ditiramb
dithyrambic in Italian: Ditirambo
dithyrambic in Hebrew: דיתיראמבוס
dithyrambic in Dutch: Dithyrambe
dithyrambic in Japanese: ディテュランボス
dithyrambic in Polish: Dytyramb
dithyrambic in Portuguese: Ditirambo
dithyrambic in Russian: Дифирамб
dithyrambic in Slovak: Dityramb
dithyrambic in Slovenian: Ditiramb
dithyrambic in Serbian: Дитирамб
dithyrambic in Finnish: Dityrambi
dithyrambic in Swedish: Dityramb
dithyrambic in Ukrainian:
Дифірамб