Cordax
The cordax (Ancient Greek: Κόρδαξ),[1] was a provocative, licentious, and often obscene mask dance[2] of ancient Greek comedy.[3][4] In his play The Clouds, Aristophanes complains that other playwrights of his time try to hide the feebleness of their plays by bringing an old woman onto the stage to dance the cordax. He notes with pride that his patrons will not find such gimmicks in his plays. The dance can be compared with the modern Tsifteteli.[5]
Petronius Arbiter in his Roman novel the Satyricon has Trimalchio boast to his dinner guests that no one dances the cordax better than his wife, Fortunata. The nature of this dance is described in the satires of Juvenal, who says "the girls encouraged by applause sink to the ground with tremulous buttocks." The poet Horace and playwright Plautus refer to the same dance as iconici motus.
Juvenal makes specific mention of the testarum crepitus (clicking of castanets). In the earlier Greek form, finger cymbals were used.
Notes
- ↑ Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon "κόρδαξ"
- ↑ "Dance in Classical Greece". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2008-03-07.
- ↑ Dance and Greek Drama by Bernard Gredley. Drama, Dance, and Music By James Redmond (M.A.).
- ↑ "Dionysian Meditations". Retrieved 2008-03-07.
- ↑ Tsifteteli - kordax, Hē Lexē: volumes 21-28