The Individual and the Community in the Gretchen Story David Pan Humanities Core Course Winter 2012, Lecture 3.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Victory Chant Hail Jesus! You're my King! Your life frees me to sing I will praise You all my days You're perfect in all Your ways.
Advertisements

Here’s an interesting conversation. It’s a little lengthy
CLICK TO ADVANCE SLIDES A Perfect World is Coming
Click to add school + priest’s name
And can it be that I should gain an interest in the Savior's blood? Died He for me who caused His pain For me who Him to death pursued? Amazing love!
Year Three Term 2 Lesson 1 WELCOME TO THURSDAY’S CHAPEL LESSON Year Three, Term 2, Lesson 1.
Announce the blessings and rewards for following Jesus Christ.
No Sweeter Name No sweeter name than the name of Jesus No sweeter name have I ever known No sweeter name than the name of Jesus.
Welcome!.
Love The Lord Your God Love the Lord your God With all your heart With all your soul With all your mind And with all your strength (2x)
St. Philip Cedar Welcome and Celebrations.
Reaching For You You created me inside Your great imagination You're the One who gave me my first breath You have overseen my life and brought me to redemption.
Moms… We Honor You Today!. Let It Rise Let the glory of the Lord rise among us Let the glory of the Lord rise among us Let the praises of the King rise.
‘The God of Israel will be your rear guard’ ‘The God of Israel will be your rear guard’ Is 52:12 (Pt2) 1.The Amalekites were actually relatives of the.
Hear our praises May our homes be filled with dancing May our streets be filled with joy May injustice bow to Jesus As the people turn and pray.
Hear our praises May our homes Be filled with dancing
Unhurried: What’s the Hurry? What changes in our practice of the Christian life if we decide we are going to treat it like a marathon instead of a series.
Made to Worship Before the day… Before the light… Before the world revolved around the sun God on high Stepped down into time And wrote the story of His.
Before the day… Before the light…
Praise Service Sunday November 16, 2008
Welcome to West Park United Church of Christ.
 You are not alone.  Many men and women of God felt like that in the Bible.  Job  Moses  Jacob  Joseph  David.
Mark 5:  Jesus got into the boat again and went back to the other side of the lake, where a large crowd gathered around him on the shore. 22 Then.
Reformation.
2011 WELCOME. Principal’s Welcome Please remain seated as our senior students welcome our kindergarten children into the church. CIRCLE OF LIFE.
Welcome. Hosanna Praise is rising Eyes are turning to You We turn to You Hope is stirring Hearts are yearning for You We long for You.
God has no grandchildren. Every person becomes a follower of Christ through another person. Part of being a disciple is helping other people become.
Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people: for unto you is born in the city of David, a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.
Welcome to ….
Joy To The World Joy to the world! The Lord is come;
since we have been made right because of what Jesus Christ
Asking the Right Question Who's Really Blind?. Jesus has just said: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will.
A Legacy of Hope May 13. Think About It … What are some situations where a person feels hopeless? Everyone feels hopeless at some point in life … and.
Blessed Be Your Name Blessed be Your name, in the land that is plentiful. Where Your streams of abundance flow. Blessed be Your name. Blessed be Your.
Giving Up to Gain: Sermon #3: Giving Up Broken Promises You may have heard that Jesus stood against divorce, but wait until you hear his teaching in the.
Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight! Yes, what joy for those whose record the LORD has cleared of guilt,
Bless the Lord (Son of Man) Son of Man, Son of righteousness King of the earth for sinner’s slain I was lost in darkness found Ransom my heart and I will.
“When you speak of Heaven, let your face light up. When you speak of Hell, well then, your everyday face will do.” ~ Charles Haddon Spurgeon “When.
The Phrase In the beginning God created …. Gen 1:1 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
Young Adult Ministry Worship Harvest Bible Chapel.
You are the Lord, The famous One Famous One, Great is Your name in all the earth. The heaven's declare, You're glorious, glorious Great is Your fame beyond.
YE 4 Reunion #6.
O Worship the king and tell of his might
We’re glad you’re here l m e e. WONDER OF YOUR LOVE Your love is higher than the mountain peaks It calls me out as deep calls to deep Your love.
John 17: Now I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to You. Holy Father, keep through Your name those whom You.
Always My foes are many they rise against me But I will hold my ground, I will not fear the war I will not fear the storm Always My foes are many they.
Greater Than our Hearts You who are greater than our hearts, Come make your faithful mercies known, The mind of Christ to us impart Your constant mind.
CCLI# Your Grace is Enough CCLI# Great is Your faithfulness, oh God You wrestle with the sinner’s heart Great is Your faithfulness,
Welcome to … Pajamas, Pancakes, and Prayer. RAIN DOWN.
This Easter, let Jesus change the way you think about religion.
The Potential of Prayer.
‘Bless You’. 3 Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4 Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. 5 Blessed.
The Individual and the Community in the Gretchen Story David Pan Humanities Core Course Winter 2011, Lecture 3.
Isaiah 6:5 - 7 And I said: “Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes.
Sight Words.
Hallelujah (Your Love Makes Me Sing) Your love is amazing Steady and unchanging Your love is a mountain Firm beneath my feet.
Be Thou My Vision Be Thou my vision, O Lord of my heart; Naught be all else to me, save that Thou art: Thou my best thought, by day or by night, Waking.
Welcome to....
Following Jesus – the Great Commission Communion TFG Summer 2015.
Welcome!. Hosanna Praise is rising Eyes are turning to You We turn to You Hope is stirring Hearts are yearning for You We long for You.
Reaching For You You created me inside Your great imagination You're the One who gave me My first breath.
Welcome!. Hosanna Praise is rising Eyes are turning to You We turn to You Hope is stirring Hearts are yearning for You We long for You.
He says, “This is the message we have heard from him,” that is, the Lord Jesus, “and proclaim to you, God is light.” He begins with God. Why is that so.
Welcome!. Hosanna Praise is rising Eyes are turning to You We turn to You.
Mother Teresa. Her best quotes "People are often unreasonable and self-centered. Forgive them anyway. If you are kind, people may accuse you of ulterior.
___________________________________________________ Hallelujah, hallelujah, hallelujah Your love makes me sing.
CCLI# Your Grace is Enough CCLI# Great is Your faithfulness, oh God You wrestle with the sinner’s heart.
Come people of the risen KING
Jesus said, "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." -Matthew 19:14 NIV.
God is good all the time He puts a song of praise in this heart of mine through the darkest night His light will shine God is good, God is good all the.
Presentation transcript:

The Individual and the Community in the Gretchen Story David Pan Humanities Core Course Winter 2012, Lecture 3

FAUST. Be not afraid that I might break this pact! The sum and essence of my striving is the very thing I promise you. I had become too overblown, while actually I only rank with you. Ever since the mighty spirit turned from me, Nature kept her doorway closed. The threads of thought are torn to pieces, and learning has become repugnant. Let in the throes of raging senses seething passions quench my thirst! In never lifted magic veils let every miracle take form! Let me plunge into the rush of passing time, into the rolling tide of circumstance! Then let sorrow and delight, frustration or success, occur in turn as happenstance; restless action is the state of man. ( , pp ) He accepts that he cannot rule over nature. He rejects thought and learning. He embraces action and wants to immerse himself in the passions and circumstances of the human world. Faust’s promise to never be satisfied is the “sum and essence” of his striving as an individual. Faust imagines a merging of individual ideal and worldly reality through human action in society.

STRUCTURE OF FAUST DEDICATION PRELUDE IN THE THEATER PROLOGUE IN HEAVEN FAUST STORY Night Before the Gate Faust’s Study Auerbach’s Cellar in Leipzig Witch’s Kitchen GRETCHEN STORY A Street Evening Promenade The Neighbor’s House A Street Martha’s Garden A Summer Cabin Forest and Cavern Gretchen’s Room Martha’s Garden At the Well By the Ramparts Night Cathedral WALPURGIS NIGHT Walpurgis Night Walpurgis- Night’s Dream GRETCHEN STORY Gloomy Day – Field Night – Open Field Dungeon Act 1: Emperor StoryAct 2: Classical Walpurgis Night Act 3: Helen Story Act 4: Counter-Emperor StoryAct 5: Baucis and Philemon StoryAct 5: BurialAct 5: Mountain gorges Faust I Faust II

How does the Gretchen story relate to the Faust story?

The Bourgeois Tragic Drama Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Emilia Galotti (1772) A prince tries to capture a bourgeois daughter in order to make her into his mistress. The daughter’s father kills her at her request so that the prince cannot capture and seduce her. Heinrich Leopold Wagner, The Child Murderess (1776) A bourgeois daughter is seduced by an aristocratic officer. Fearing her father’s condemnation, she flees her home when she becomes pregnant. She kills her child in her despair over her situation and is condemned to death. The conflicts of these dramas focus on the formation and defense of bourgeois morality as an alternative to the licentiousness of the aristocracy.

Goethe alters the bourgeois tragic drama to shift the perspective from the community to the individual. The story is told from the perspective of the seducer. Fathers are absent, and individuals must decide for themselves. The class conflict is overshadowed by the conflict between Faust’s dynamic, striving character and Margaret’s static attachment to her family and community. The problem in Faust I is not the status of the community but the moral decisions of individuals. The story is told from the perspective of the daughter. The moral severity of bourgeois fathers is central for the action. The daughter’s situation involves a defense of bourgeois families against aristocratic excesses. Bourgeois tragic drama Goethe’s Faust Perspective Role of Fathers Role of Community

Feeling is the evidence for God. Faust is concerned more with worldly phenomena than with a personified God. Feeling rather than the word becomes the source of authority. Faust ‘s response to the “Gretchen question.” The All-Enfolding, All-Sustaining, does He not uphold and keep you, me, Himself? Do you not see the vaulted skies above? Is our earth not firmly set below? Do not everlasting stars rise up to show their friendly light? Is my gaze not deeply locked in yours, and don’t you feel your being surging to your head and heart, weaving in perennial mystery invisibly and visibly in you? Fill your heart to overflowing, and when you feel profoundest bliss, then call it what you will: Good fortune! Heart! Love! or God! I have no name for it! Feeling is all; the name is sound and smoke, beclouding Heaven’s glow. ( , pp ) God is one with creation. The name is not important.

Faust turns to the Earth Spirit, not God FAUST. You roam the ample world, my bustling spirit; how close I feel to you! SPIRIT. You’re like the spirit that you grasp. You’re not like me. (The SPIRIT vanishes.) FAUST (overwhelmed). Not your equal? Then whom do I resemble? I, the image of the godhead! And not your equal? (510-17, pp ) Faust does not seek material gain, but rather a god-like experience of the world and of nature. He has no means to achieve the power over nature that he seeks. Goethe, Johann Wolgang von. Faust and Erdgeist. 1810/12 or Wikimedia Commons. Wikimedia, 31 January Web. 22 December 2010.

Faust’s motivations and justifications FAUST. Sublime Spirit, you gave me everything, gave me all I ever asked. Not in vain you turned your fiery countenance on me. You gave me glorious Nature for my kingdom, the strength to feel and to enjoy Her. ( , p. 291) Feeling as highest justification FAUST. When in her arms, I need no joys of Heaven. The warmth I seek is burning in her breast. Do I not every moment feel her woe? (3347, p. 301) Address to Mephistopheles Address to Earth Spirit

FAUST: You'll always be a sophist and a liar! MEPHISTOPHELES: True enough; except I've peered a little deeper. For will you not, in words of great propriety befog poor Gretchen, come tomorrow, and swear your heart and soul belong to her? FAUST: An that with all my heart! MEPHISTOPHELES: That’s good of you! And then you’ll speak of faith and love eternal, of a single, overpowering urge— will that flow so easily from your heart? FAUST: Enough, I say it will.—When I am deeply stirred and through the raging tumult seek and grope in vain for name and speech, sweep through the world with all my senses, reach for the highest words that come to me, and the ardor in which I burn I call infinite, eternal fire— can that be called a devil’s game of lies? MEPHISTOPHELES: All the same, I’m right. FAUST: Listen now! Mark this well, I beg of you, and let me save my breath— Anyone intent on winning, if he but use his tongue, will win, But come, I’m tired of this idle chatter, for you have won your point, since what I do, I must. ( , pp ) Faust agrees to lie to achieve his goals. Words and Feelings Mephistopheles points out that Faust will lie to Margaret about the eternal character of his love. Faust claims that passion can make his words true. Words are not truth but only rhetoric.

Words and Feelings FAUST. Oh, do not tremble. Look into my eyes; let my hands which press your hands convey to you the inexpressible: to give oneself completely and to feel an ecstasy which must be everlasting! Everlasting!—the end would be despair. No—no end! no end! (MARGARET clasps his hands, frees herself, and runs off. FAUST stands for a moment in deep thought, then follows her.) ( , p. 285) The focus of “everlasting” is not on a promise of marriage, but on how he describes his present feeling.

Goethe’s Faust is: A. a villain for the play and for us. (Faustbuch, Michael Jaeger) B. a villain for the play and a hero for us. (18 th century Faust as farce) C. a hero for the play and for us. (Frederick Amrine, Astrida Tantillo) D. a hero for the play and a villain for us. (Alberto Destro) E. don’t understand the question.

Hears Evil Spirit’s repetition of community opinions. Seeks comfort from the Mater Dolorosa Feels guilty when she hears Lieschen criticize Barbara’s behavior. Gives her mother a sleeping potion to spend the night with Faust. Continues with Faust even after he rejects the name of God. Has no father, but takes 1st jewelry box to her mother Individualism Respect for Community Trajectory of Margaret’s development Hides 2 nd jewelry box from her mother with Martha Asks Faust about his belief in God. Kills her baby Though she would like at this point to return to her community, they will not accept her. Chooses judgment over escape from prison

Margaret vs. Faust MARGARET. I dare not leave; for me there’s nothing more to hope. Why escape? I know they lie in wait for me. It’s misery to go begging, and with a guilty conscience too. It’s a misery to wander where I am not at home, and in the end they’ll come to hunt me down. ( , pp ) Margaret sees her life as bounded by her surrounding community. FAUST. Let me plunge into the rush of passing time, into the rolling tide of circumstance! Then let sorrow and delight, frustration or success, occur in turn as happenstance; restless action is the state of man. ( , p. 137) Sees his experiences in terms of his own continual movement through the world.

EVIL SPIRIT. What misdeed is lodged in your heart? Do you pray for he soul of your mother, who through your doing passed to never-ending sleep? Whose blood stains your doorstep?— Is something not stirring and swelling beneath your heart, making itself and you afraid with stark foreboding? ( , p. 343) EVIL SPIRIT. Hide! Hide! Yet sin and shame will not remain concealed. ( , p. 345) EVIL SPIRIT. From you the blessed turn their faces. The pure recoil from offering their hand. Woe! ( , p. 347) VALENTINE. Once you said farewell to honor, you dealt my heart a heavy blow. ( , p. 341) LIESCHEN. It stinks! Now she must eat and drink for two. ( , p. 321) VALENTINE. You will hide in dismal nooks and corners among the cripples and the beggars, and even if our God forgive you in the end, you’ll still be damned on earth until you die! ( , p. 341) VALENTINE. Even now I see the time when all the decent people of this town will turn, as from a festering cadaver, away from you, you slut! ( , p. 339) The Evil Spirit repeats to Margaret the condemnations from Valentine and Lieschen.

Faust. Given over to evil spirits and to the unfeeling who presume to dispense justice! (Gloomy Day—Field, p. 399) Faust. It was her life, her peace I had to ruin. (3360, p. 301) His feelings of guilt are related, not to the transgression of moral principles from the community or the church, but to the practical consequences for Margaret. Faust criticizes the way the townspeople persecute Margaret by means of their moral principles.