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Rob Hardy Revitalizes Aeschylus’s Oresteia

March 4, 2013

Photo by Linnea Bullion
Photo by Linnea Bullion

Last May, NER contributor Rob Hardy’s adaptation of Aeschylus’s Oresteia was performed at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. The production featured a massive set by Twin Cities designer Joseph Stanley and music by composer Mary Ellen Childs. From Eric Dugdale’s review in Didaskalia: “Hardy’s adaptation offers a stripped-down style in which every word counts and immediacy trumps Aeschylean grandeur…Hardy has succeeded at producing a script that is evocative and unhurried.”

Hardy also had one of his poems imprinted on a Northfield sidewalk last August as part of the Sidewalk Poetry Contest, sponsored by the city’s Arts & Culture Commission. The contest is now open for submissions for 2013.

Rob Hardy has appeared numerous times in NER, most recently in 28.1. His essay Theodore Roosevelt and the Masculine/Feminine Complex was featured on our site.

Filed Under: NER Community Tagged With: Carleton College, Didaskalia, Oresteia, Rob Hardy

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Volume 39, Number 1
Cover art by Jeanne Borofsky

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Confluences

To Dance or Not to Dance? A Mother’s Question

Anne P. Beatty

To Dance or Not to Dance? A Mother’s Question

What hubris, to think I can avoid signing my white daughter up for society’s lessons on how women should view their bodies. Eva’s cage already has more space between the bars than some. I can keep her out of dance studios, maybe, but I cannot keep her from middle-school locker rooms, or Snapchat. The trap is sprung.

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