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Styles, Stages, and More Greek Structure and Tragedy
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Absence of narrator/mediator (usually): we have to construct meaning directly. Stagecraft: lighting & other elements to create setting/mood on stage. Collaborative effort: director & actors must interpret the playwright’s words. Every production of a play is different. Theatre is a group experience: actors affected by audience response; audience members affect each other.
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Greeks, beginning around 500 B.C. : Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides: tragedy; Aristophanes, Menander: comedy. Romans a couple of centuries later: Terence, Plautus: comedies. Seneca: tragedy. Long dry spell; a few in medieval times, passion plays Renaissance: Shakespeare et al. Restoration plays. Spanish, French golden ages. British greatness, beginning with G. B. Shaw (1890) and continuing into 20th century. American drama: begins in 1787 with Tyler’s The Contrast. Becomes great with O’Neill (1915) and continues to present day.
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Plot: action of drama—what happens Character: revealed in time; motivation Thought Theme Issues addressed Statement on society Diction: dialogue & soliloquy Music: song Spectacle Extravagant Grotesque Minimalist
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Arena Style theatre in Amphitheatre. All seats get to view. Actors wear masks, project, “overact.” Plays performed in daylight. Men play all roles.
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Greek drama begins with the Prologue. The Prologue’s purpose is to give background information to situate the conflict. Often, the Chorus – a group of actors who comment on the action in the play and provide exposition – give the Prologue.
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Choral song chanted by the Chorus as they enter the area in front of the stage. Parados literally means passage.
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Serves to separate one scene from another (since there were no curtains in Greek theaters). Also allowed the Chorus’s response to the preceding scene.
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Strophe – part of the ode that the chorus chants as it moves from right to left across the stage. Antistrophe – part of the ode chanted as the chorus moves back across the stage from left to right.
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Following the Parados, the first scene presents the conflict of the play.
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A hymn in praise of a god.
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Final scene of the play.
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Compression and Contrast – tightening the action to get the most bang from the buck. Starting close to the action. Cutting out scenes that don’t move the story along. Symbols that clue readers/viewers into meaning. A foil – a dramatic contrast for the hero. Dramatic Structure
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Aristotle: tragedy evokes fear and pity in audience, causing catharsis. The Tragic Spirit is… More or less pessimistic… suffering is required. Essentially humanistic, centered on the interest and claims of humans, the emotional reaction to the events not the horror seen on stage. not cynical. an affirmation of positive values; great tragedies do not end in sheer terror, horror, or despair even if they end unhappily. A General Definition of Tragedy
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Tragedy enriches our experience by: Deepening Widening, Refining our consciousness of the possibilities of life. Tragedy examines the problem of human fate: Relations to his total environment, Position in the universe, The ultimate meaning of his life. Greek tragedy promoted life by promoting wisdom. The old stories were told to be more philosophical than historical.
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Is not all good or bad Is of the noble class or highly renowned and prosperous Has a tragic flaw Recognizes his error and accepts the consequences Arouses the audience’s pity and fear Is from a well-known myth
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Delphic Oracle – The Prophecy and Apollo Corinth The Riddle of the Sphinx Self-punishment Children: Eteocles Polyneices Ismene Antigone
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