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 Born in Athens, Greece, between 500-494 BCE  Belonged to an affluent Athenian family  Wrote at least 120 plays, 90 of them tragedies  Died 406-405.

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Presentation on theme: " Born in Athens, Greece, between 500-494 BCE  Belonged to an affluent Athenian family  Wrote at least 120 plays, 90 of them tragedies  Died 406-405."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Born in Athens, Greece, between 500-494 BCE  Belonged to an affluent Athenian family  Wrote at least 120 plays, 90 of them tragedies  Died 406-405 BCE

3  Athenian government was an “exclusionary democracy,” run by elected officials in the form of an open assembly.  Only about 10% of the population was eligible to participate.  Women, slaves, & “non-citizens” were excluded.  Although Sophocles was a member of the ruling class, he was aware of the social inequalities in Athenian society.  His plays include repeated attempts to warn his fellow Greeks of the divine retribution that would come to them as a result of their prejudices & injustice to the poor.

4  The Greek pantheon consisted of hundreds of deities in a complex hierarchy.  The familiar “Olympian” gods - closest to humans - were a relatively small part of the overall scheme.  While immortal & powerful, the gods were not all- powerful in the sense of our modern concepts of God.  The gods themselves were subject to FATE and to each other’s will.  In Oedipus Rex, the Delphic Oracle is the prophet of Oedipus’s doomed fate, but she’s not the cause of it - nor is Apollo.

5  The Greeks did, to some extent, believe in FREE WILL.  Still, FREE WILL was not more powerful than DESTINY.  Oedipus is a perfect example of the belief that, try as they might, people cannot avoid the destinies to which they are born.  Nonetheless, as Oedipus’s FATE is the result of his father’s earlier misdeed, human FREE WILL cannot be completely dismissed either.

6  Laius - Oedipus’s birth father - was raised by a single mother who ruled Thebes as her dead husband’s regent.  Laius’s two young cousins usurped the throne & plotted to kill young Laius.  So, Laius was smuggled out of Thebes and given to Pelops, King of Pisa, to raise.  Laius became the tutor of Pelops’s favorite son, Chryssipus, whom he abducted and took back to Thebes.

7  The two cousins having died, Laius claimed his throne & held Chryssipus captive.  Pelops raised an army & demanded the return of his son, but it was discovered Chryssipus was already dead.  Laius & his house were cursed because of his poor treatment of Pelops & Chryssipus.  When Laius married Jocasta, he was warned NOT to have children by her because his son by Jocasta would one day kill him.

8  One night, while drunk, Laius imprudently disregarded the prophecy* - and Oedipus was conceived.  Thus, while Oedipus is, to a large extent, a pawn of FATE, at the root of that ill destiny is an act of FREE WILL that went against nature and angered the gods.  Oedipus came to rule Thebes by solving the riddle posed by the Sphinx and thus saving Thebes from chaos and destruction.

9  The Greek Sphinx was a demon of death and destruction and bad luck.  It was a female creature, sometimes depicted as a winged lion with a feminine head, and sometimes as a female with the breast, paws and claws of a lion, a snake tail and bird wings.  She sat on a high rock near Thebes and posed a riddle to all who passed.

10  The riddle was: "What animal is that which in the morning goes on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three? ”  She strangled those who could not solve the riddle.  Finally, Oedipus came along to save the day.

11  Oedipus was the only who could answer that it was ” man, who in childhood creeps on hands and knees, in manhood walks erect, and in old age with the aid of a staff. ”  The Sphinx was so mortified at the solving of her riddle that she cast herself down from the rock and perished.

12  Sixth Century BCE  According to legend & recorded by Aristotle, Thespis essentially invented acting by stepping in front of the chorus & performing a solo.  The word “thespian” has come to mean “actor.”  Fifth Century BCE  Athens made tremendous advances in philosophy, rhetoric, literature, science, architecture, and visual arts.  Tragedies were performed in annual competitions that were a part of the Lenaia and the Great Dionysia, religious festivals held in honor of Dionysis.

13  One of the twelve Olympian gods  God of wine & ecstasy  Inspirer of ritual madness  Patron of theater & agriculture

14 Theatre of Dionysus, Athens

15  Each competing playwright produced 3 tragedies & a satyr-play.  The three best submissions were approved & given a chorus for performance.  On the last day of the festival, a prize was awarded to the tragic playwright voted best of the year.

16  Aeschylus - wrote the Oresteia, a tragic trilogy, & introduced the use of a second actor onstage, interacting with the first. He also began to develop a more complicated plot. He won 13 festival competitions.  Euripides - wrote Medea. He won 4 festival competitions.  Sophocles  brought a third actor on-stage, created scene design, and enlarged the chorus from 12 to 15.  wrote the “Theban plays,” Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus, and Antigone.  won 20 festival competitions.

17  While Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus, and Antigone are often anthologized together and in “chronological” order, they are not a trilogy.  Antigone was written first and Oedipus at Colonus last - about 40 years later.  Each work should be considered a separate work, NOT episodes in a serial.

18 Dramatic Irony  The audience was already familiar with the plots, taken from well-known myths.  Therefore, they always had more information about the action than the characters onstage did.  Suspense was in HOW the well-known events would transpire & in the audience’s watching the events unfold in “real time.”  Due to the religious intent and dignified style, no violence was shown on stage.  The messenger ran on stage and spoke to the audience of any deaths or killings.

19  Plays were acted in the daytime, with minimal sets and props.  Actors were all male.  Actors wore masks, wigs, and high-heeled boots, which increased their visibility to the audience & added to the formality of the experience.

20  To increase dramatic intensity, the plays observed the THREE UNITIES described by Aristotle…  Unity of Time: All the action of the play took place within twenty-four hours, in continuous time. Dialogue and the Chorus provided background information.  Unity of Place: All of the action was limited to a single setting  Unity of Subject: single main plot no sub-plots.

21  Was used to present exposition & to provide commentary on the action & characters:  15 men represented the citizens.  They were always on stage, and they frequently sang and danced.  They always had a leader who carried on a dialogue with the main characters or with the rest of the chorus.

22  The function of the chorus was to…  Set the tone  Give background information  Recall events of the past  Interpret and summarize events  Ask questions  Offer opinions  Give advice, if asked  Stay objective  Act like a jury of elders or wise men who listened to the evidence and reached a moralistic conclusion at the end of the play

23  Performed in song with a highly formal and stylized back-and-forth movement that heightened the emotion of their performance:  Strophe - first part of a choral ode  Antistrophe - follows the strophe  Epode - completes the chorus’s movement

24 Aristotle’s definition in his Poetics: “an imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in language embellished with each kind of artistic ornament, the several kinds being found in separate parts of the play; in the form of action, not of narrative, through pity and fear effecting the proper purgation of these emotions” (VI.2, p. 23).

25  Aristotle said tragedy aroused the emotions of PITY and FEAR.  Ideally, tragedy brings about a purging of these emotions.  This release of feelings = Catharsis.  The release was/is thought to produce emotional relief and encourage psychological health.  Tragedy heals.  Catharsis = the end goal of tragedy.

26  Tragedy is not true in the sense that history is true.  It’s not a duplication of life, but a representation.  Plot consists of a self-contained and concentrated single action.  Only those incidents integral to the action are included in the play.

27  Peripeteia: Reversal of fortune from good to bad.  Anagnorisis: A change from ignorance to knowledge. This recognition = discovery of true identity or involvement, establishment of guilt or innocence, & revelation of previously unknown details.  Scene of Suffering: a destructive of painful action, such as death, bodily agony, or wounds. This destructive or painful action should be caused by loved ones. This will arouse the most fear & pity.

28  The tragic condition is often the result of the tragic hero’s hamartia, often defined as the tragic flaw that leads to the hero’s downfall.  More accurately, hamartia is an error in judgment or perception, the hero’s inability to see his flaw or to accurately foresee the consequences of his decisions or actions.  A common trait associated with hamartia is hubris.  Hubris = exaggerated self pride or self confidence, which often results in fatal retribution.  Hubris against the gods is generally regarded as a character flaw of the heroes in Greek tragedy and the cause of their destruction.

29  The tragic hero’s misfortunes are not caused by vice or depravity - but by some great error.  The error makes him human to the audience; thus, he arouses fear and pity in us because we can see ourselves in his place.  We - the audience - are able to sympathize with the protagonist because he is imperfect, just like us, and his suffering exceeds what he deserves.  This sympathetic identification makes catharsis possible.  Consider Oedipus as a tragic hero…  Do you believe he is a pawn of FATE? How much blame does he bear for his situation?  Do you feel fear & pity for him?  Does the play move you to a cathartic response?


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