ROUTINE, CONFLICT, STATUS GAMES Literary Kinds: Drama (I)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
INTRODUCTION TO HUMANITIES
Advertisements

Tragedy Literary Terms Source: C. Hugh Holman’s
Greek Theatre History. Greek Theatre Grew out of religious ceremonies (rituals), which were prominent features of Greek society Grew out of religious.
Dramatic and Literary Elements
TRAGEDY & TRAGIC HEROS This presentation was created following the Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia. Certain materials are included under.
What Defines Tragedy? 3.1 Articulate the relationship between the expressed purposes and the characteristics of different forms of dramatic literature.
(N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)
Aristotle’s Poetics.
Tragedy & The Tragic Hero. Tragedy Aristotle first defined tragedy in his book Poetics written in about 330 BC: “an imitation of an action that is serious,
TRAGEDY—A CLASSICAL TRADITION. TRAGEDIES HAVE BEEN AROUND AWHILE Tragedy is the dark side of classical drama (comedy vs. tragedy) Comedy: hero falls in.
CHARACTERS The actors in a story’s plot People, animals, robots, or whatever the writer chooses May be more than one main character, particularly in a.
Aristotle’s Poetics Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Kay Picart Associate Professor of English Courtesy Associate Professor of Law.
AP Literature and Composition “It’s a Comedy vs. Tragedy Tuesday!” November 17, 2009 Mr. Houghteling.
Aristotle’s Poetics : Tragedy.
Medea Structural and tragic conventions. Aristotle Aristotle wrote the ‘Poetics’ in the fourth century BC. He created a definition of tragedy that set.
The Structure of Drama Readings:
“DRAMA” Types of Drama Tragedy:
Introduction to DRAMA Lecture I+II.
Unit 2: Dramatic Genres Miss Long. What will I study? This unit focuses on Drama and Comedy. You will study two plays that are both comedies: – Much Ado.
Tragedy Othello.
Oedipus Rex & The Tragic Hero
Analyzing Tragedy & Tragic Fiction Aristotelian Theory.
Drama Characteristics of the Genre. History Drama began with the early Greeks who produced religious oriented plays to celebrate the resurrection of the.
Introduction to Tragedy
Background to Greek Tragedy AP English Language and Composition Mr. Eugene.
Drama. A drama is a story enacted onstage for a live audience. What Is Drama?
ETI 309 Elements of Drama (Literary, Technical, Performance)
AP Literature and Composition
The History of Theater Play Production Mrs. Gugel.
Plot Structure Through Short Stories
Journal #2: 02/24/2010 Solve a World Problem Make a short list of 3-5 problems that exist in the world today (like hunger, jobs, etc. ) Make a short list.
Greek Theatre and Tragedy: An Introduction to Antigone English II Pre-AP.
Theatre – a Multimedia Art Form Routine, Conflict, Status Games.
Introduction To Theatre Reget/Julious: 3,5,6,8,9.
BBL 3103 LITERARY THEORY FROM PLATO TO T. S. ELIOT DR. IDA BAIZURA BAHAR.
What is Tragedy?.
Elements of Drama. Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) was a Greek philosopher who was a student of Plato’s and a teacher to Alexander the Great. His writings.
Tragedy Classic, Shakespeare, Modern, The Tragic Man.
Elements of a Story What you need to know! Story Elements  Setting  Characters  Plot  Conflict  Resolution  Point of View  Theme.
Oedipus Rex by Sophocles
Aristotle on Tragedy From his “Poetics”. Teachings – What and How Aristotle taught in what later became known as Peripatetics meaning to walk about which.
Aristotelian Tragedy in Shakespeare Structure and Conflict
MS. CUTLER FUNDAMENTALS OF DRAMA Structure Of Drama.
Macbeth.
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA DRAMA  A story written to be performed by actors in front of an audience.
DRAMATIC STRUCTURE. “Everything’s been said.” “Every story’s been told.” “Human experience is finite.”
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA Jake Denolan. Character  Most simply a character is one of the persons who appears in the play, one of the dramatis personae (literally,
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA Romeo and Juliet By William Shakespeare.
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA Mrs.McAllister. ArIstotleArIstotle Aristotle was born in Stagirus, Macedonia, Greece in 384 BC and died 62 years later in 322 BC. He.
Literary Terms Week Two. Irony »Irony is the contrast between what is expected or what appears to be and what actually is. It is not a coincidence. Irony.
Who was he?  Aristotle ( B.C.) was a Greek philosopher who described the elements of theatre in The Poetics.
Aristotle’s Definition of a Tragic Hero. Essential Questions To what extent does Okonkwo fit Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero? What flaw leads.
Shakespearean Tragedy
Elements of a Tragedy English II-H. O “A man cannot become a hero until he sees the root of his own downfall.” - Aristotle O “You either die a hero or.
Plays. Elements of a Play Introduction Introduction Rising Action Rising Action Climax Climax Falling Action Falling Action Conclusion Conclusion.
IT’S STORY TIME.
Literary Elements of Julius Caesar
Oedipus Rex (the King) Sophocles BC. Sophocles consistently won the Dionysian festival of Greek drama All characters were male and wore masks.
Plot, Character, Theme, Vocab
Drama: Major genre of literature; performed on stage
Theatre – a Multimedia Art Form
Introduction to the Elements of Fiction
Drama What is it?.
Drama, Drama, Drama Vocabulary.
Tragedy terms/concepts
8th Grade English Language Arts
Plot, Setting, and Conflict
Techniques and elements of Literature
The Elements of Drama 7th Grade Language Arts.
Theatre – a Multimedia Art Form
Presentation transcript:

ROUTINE, CONFLICT, STATUS GAMES Literary Kinds: Drama (I)

Drama basis: our human instinct to play, to imitate “There seem to be two causes that give rise to poetry in general, and they are both natural. The impulse to imitate is inherent in man from his childhood; he is distinguished among the animals by being the most imitative of them, and he takes the first steps of his education by imitating. Every one's enjoyment of imitation is also inborn. What happens with works of art demonstrates this.” Aristotle, Poetics iv. tr. L.J. Potts (Cambridge 1959)

DRAMA IS NOT PRIMARILY A LITERARY ART Shakespeare in translation (even adaptation) a good production even if you do not speak the language MEDIUM: the theatre immediacy of action group effort for a group audience multimedial form of presentation succession and simultaneity: sequentiality & juxtaposition

Drama and theatre Greek 'theory': of viewing, not doing — from Gk theoreo 'behold' THEATRE: another mode of contemplation — from Gk theaomai 'behold' the feeling of belonging to society - people with similar problems, conventions, belief, behaviour

Theatre presentation of conflicts in extremis & problem solving patterns identification, catharsis (Gk 'purgation') - social healing function 'Tragedy through pity and fear effects a purgation of such emotions‘ (Aristotle, Poetics. Ch VI) identification - deception - dramatic surprise: repeatable because of the richnesss of context

Levels of awareness in the dramatic figures and the audience 'willing suspension of disbelief ' (Coleridge, Biographia Literaria. Chapter XIV) - stories are often familiar (Gk drama, new productions, seeing sg again) 'alienation effect' (A-effect, Verfremdungseffekt, Bertolt Brecht) dramatic irony: when the internal and external communication systems interfere with each other (superior awareness of audience)

Aspects of a play: Plot imitation of life, of action + probability, credibility events are not dramatic in themselves presenting the story: succession, concentration, segmentation, composition story: purely chronologically arranged succession of events & occurrences plot: already contains important structural elements: e.g., the presentation of time - order of scenes vs order of events in story fictional time vs actual performance time

Aspects of a play (continued) action: the intentionally chosen transition from one situation to the next event: condition for story are met, but not for action: no intention to change the situatio CHARACTER - types and individuals DIALOGUE - dramatic speech situations

Astonishment and suspense stories as routines: kissing the frog, killing dragon *break the routine just established: Little Red Riding Hood, (breaking routine on large scale: Shrek) *keep action onstage: messenger in Greek drama: the effect unity of plot + time and place (Aristotle) 3 unities of action, time & place (French Neoclassical critics) Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra (– Dr Johnson, 1765) *revolve around conflict – otherwise you cancel story -

Astonishment and suspense cont. *revolve around conflict – otherwise you cancel story - e.g., Hamlet's quest for truth and revenge NOTA BENE: Hitchcock: secret of suspense lay not in what is withheld from an audience but in what the audience thought it knew

Conflict opposition between a character and some other force - protagonist and antagonist (Othello-Iago) - protagonist and society (Moliere's Misanthrope) - protagonists and external forces, e.g., Fate in Sophocles' Oedipus Rex - opposition of forces within character (inner conflict) - opposition of ideas, values, ways of life, as objectified in the conflicts

Status sg characters DO: the status PLAYED vs social status difference in the status you play and you think you play (e.g., modesty as arrogance) see-saw principle: kings and their fools: raising your status = lowering the other person's status e.g.: CUSTOMER: 'Ere, there's a cockroach in the loo! BARMAID: Well you'll have to wait till he's finished, won't you? (friends: when you AGREE to play status games together )

Status in comedy and tragedy COMEDY: when character is losing status if we do not have sympathy with him/her TRAGEDY: see-saw principle: the ousting of a high-status animal from the pack (persons to be executed: make a 'good end', i.e., play high status)

Tragedy and comedy ideas about genre often made to conform with social ideas: tragedy: concerned with kings & princes see as fit entertainment for kings & princes (who are capable of suffering it in life, who have further to fall than other man, which will affect many others) => significant tragic action comedy: even the harshest misfortunes of commoners

Roots of drama preservation of pagan rites, prehistoric vegetation rituals England: sword dances, mummers' plays (Christmastide) Greek tragedy: from rites associated with death comedy: from celebration of fertility

Playing tragedy special high-status style in English for playing tragedy: no fast movements, no fidgeting, nothing trivial or repetitive; vs 'normal consciousness' (tensing muscles, shifting position, scratching, sighing, yawning - see audiences when 'the spell is broken')

Status games SPACE - status is territorial: man on a bench - beach scenes - view master-servant scenes: place belongs to master PLAY: displays and reverses the status between the characters; status transactions in conflict