Plautus' Poenulus (The Little Carthaginian) is a work of staggering literary and
historical significance. Performed in the long shadow of Rome's struggle with
Hannibal's Carthage, this play stages the restoration of a Carthaginian family
divided through enslavement. Set against the backdrop of a Greece marked by
comedic expectations and the geography of contemporary imperial conquest,
Poenulus presents a tale of Carthaginian heartbreak and heartache to a postwar
Roman audience. The comedy's remarkable diversity prompts audience
interaction with a wide range of socio-cultural topics relevant to Plautus' time.
Engaging weighty matters through song, slapstick, puns, and spectacle, Poenulus
may appear to defang, but its bite is deep.