1 / 22

Oedipus, Sophocles, and Greek Theater

hideaki
Télécharger la présentation

Oedipus, Sophocles, and Greek Theater

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    2. Greek Drama Based on religious rites of Dionysius--god of wine & procreation Twice annual feasts w/a priest--joined by a chorus of men--reciting Dionysius exploits Feasts ? ritual ? theatre

    3. Greek Drama Stories about Dionysius ? stories encompassing all of the gods--especially the gods dealings with humanity Legends/myths mixing with religious ceremony

    4. Greek Drama: Great Dionysia Tragic dramas in 2-week long Athenian spring festival Everyone expected to attend & dramas lasted most of the day (up to 17,000 spectators = HUGE!) Typically 3 tragedies, followed by a bawdy satyr play Comedies in fall about battle of sexes

    5. Dramatic Competitions Trilogies sponsored by wealthy citizen Acted at foot of Acropolis (hill in center of Athens) Plot=man in conflict with destiny or fate Music=essential Prize=a goat in earlier times, $$$ from the state by 5th c. BC

    6. Greek Drama Tragedies follow traditional notions of conflict Person vs. Person Person vs. Nature Person vs. Society Person vs. Self (2 parts of personality in conflict) One main conflict with possible minor conflicts

    7. Greek Drama Tragedies & comedies had a chorus with 3 functions Clued in audience about events on and off stage Told the audience how to feel/react: editorialized Foreshadowed thematic events, explained greater issues to audience Chorus ? ritualized actions Strophe--structural unit of lyric singing and dancing--much like a stanza, chorus danced, sung in unison from stage right to stage left Antistrophe--structurally imitates strophe and allowed chorus to move across stage

    8. Production Open-air amphitheatre w/ stage, skene, & seats Stage set in middle of semi-circle of seats Skene--a dressing room of sorts, behind the stage, place for entrances/exits, site of major climatic scenes Orchestra=round dancing floor covered in straw and packed by oxen in front of altar Thespian=from Thespis, poet/actor with first speaking parts

    9. Production Costumes--highly stylized Soft, ballet-like shoes Tragedy: long, heavily padded robes of luxury materials, high platforms shoes, and high head-dresses (larger-than-life) Beautiful, elaborate masks w/ built-in megaphones Showed age, sex, emotion, social status of character Important b/c only 2 (& later 3) actors for all major roles Comedy: shorter robes w/ very padded tights & furry breeches w/ tails; intentionally funny masks No facial expressions--had to rely on broad, sweeping gestures (exaggerated!) & range of vocal expression

    10. Aristotles Poetics Defined (and set the bar for) tragedy and its characters who Must be plausible (though modern audiences would find them implausible) Must be consistent Must evoke emotions of fear and pity must be brought out Falls not because of innate evil but because of the tragic flaw

    11. Aristotles Poetics Tragic Flaw--a character trait that leads directly to the characters downfall: a weakness At plays end, protagonist does gain a deep insight into own nature & destiny

    12. Aristotles Poetics: Tragic Hero Noble Nature - comes from a lofty position Hamartia missing the mark = what is translated as a tragic flaw, though it is any quality that causes the downfall of the hero Free Choice - chooses the path that leads to the downfall

    13. Tragic Hero (cont.) Punishment Exceeds the Crime hero suffers excessively for actions Increased Awareness - recognizes the truth of the situation before death/moral destruction (anagnorisis) Produces Catharsis - elicits a purging of emotions/emotional response from the audience

    14. Aristotles Poetics Tragedy = a way of to tell old truths about life & the gods. the gods know best a humans imperfect nature, the failure to understand the gods, creates sorrow and destruction Familiar plots from old stories and legends (recognizable instantly by title) with variations in presentation: What would the moral be? What parts of the old story would be included? What plot twists would be added?

    15. Aristotles Poetics Each tragedy has A sense of destiny Inevitability about events Quest for justice The drama in 5 parts Exposition (after Prologos) Complication Climax Falling Action Catastrophe producing catharsis

    16. Production Actors Never women Prestigious social position Exempt from military duty Paid by govt

    17. Sophocles Born 496 BCE--lifespan covers the Golden Age of Athens, peak years of intellectual, artistic, & political glory Died 406 BCE--2 years before Athens fell to Sparta (ending the Golden Age) From a wealthy, influential family; handsome & good singer

    18. Sophocles Wrote over 120 plays--outdoing his contemporaries (Aeschylus & Euripides) 96 plays--victorious in bi-annual competitions, only 7 remain intact Not lost or destroyed b/c Athenian govt safeguarded the purity of his texts and they became schoolroom standards Ancient critics felt Sophocles was the greatest master of tragedy Oedipus = his best play

    19. Sophocles and Drama 3 changes in the presentation of drama: Enlarged the chorus from 12 to 15 (but also reduced its role = characters emphasized) Introduced painted scenery Added a third actor--most important--multiplied opportunities for dramatic intrigue and showed more modern concern w/ individual character & maturity Sophoclean hero--usually seems perverse, neurotic, or fanatical; audience senses that hero MUST act as he does

    20. Sophocles and the Gods Gods are incredibly powerful, unfailingly fulfill their oracles (Sophocles--very pious man) Gods have awesome power Gods standards of justice are not humanitys standards Gods behave as gods, humans behave as humans; the two are NOT the same

    21. The Play Itself Look for irony--including one kind we dont use any longer: cosmic irony (involves fate or destiny b/c gods have decided to take you on, no logical reason) Keep your eye out for foreshadowing Examine how the play hinges upon conflicts--what do these conflicts point to? Study the characters, the structure, & the themes--answer HOW & WHY we feel pity & fear

More Related