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Chapter 11 Tragedy and Other Serious Drama

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Title: Chapter 11 Tragedy and Other Serious Drama


1
Chapter 11Tragedy and Other Serious Drama
  • What characterizes serious drama?
  • Thoughtful, sober attitude toward its subject
  • Audience intended to consider the material
    carefully
  • Emotional involvement in the passion and
    suffering of the characters
  • Serious Dramatic Forms include
  • Tragedy
  • Heroic Drama
  • Domestic Drama
  • Melodrama

2
Tragedy
  • What are the basic questions of human existence?
  • Tragedy attempts to place the
  • ultimate highs and lows of humanity onstage.
  • Tragedy assumes that the universe is indifferent
    to human concerns and is often cruel and
    malevolent.
  • 2 Types of Tragedy
  • Traditional Tragedy
  • Periods of the past such as Ancient Greece and
    Renaissance England
  • Modern Tragedy
  • Late 19th century to present day

3
Traditional Tragedy
  • 3 Major periods of tragedy
  • Greece, 5th century B.C.
  • - Sophocles, Aeschylus, Euripides
  • England, late 16th and early 17th centuries
  • - Shakespeare, Marlowe, Kyd, Webster
  • France, 17th century
  • - Racine, Corneille

4
Characteristics of Traditional Tragedy
  • Tragic Heroes Heroines
  • Extraordinary people kings, queens, nobles
  • Suffer from a tragic flaw hubris (pride)
  • Tragic Circumstances
  • The idea of a fateful web a world outside the
    characters control
  • Tragic Irretrievability
  • The point at which there is no turning back the
    character must face his/her fate
  • Acceptance of Responsibility
  • The capacity and willingness to suffer for
    actions
  • Tragic Verse
  • High language to address lofty concerns
  • Considered the only means by which such heights
    and depths of emotion can adequately be expressed

5
The Effect of Tragedy
  • The Contradictory
  • Responses to Tragedy
  • The cruelty and corruption of the world
  • versus
  • The dignity of life and the beauty of art
  • Pessimism versus Optimism

6
Modern Tragedy
  • Characteristics
  • Written in prose
  • Dealing with the common man
  • The new tragic view based on modern society
  • Major Playwrights
  • Ibsen, Chekhov, Strindberg
  • Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, Eugene ONeill
  • But is this new approach still tragedy
  • in the purest sense?

7
Heroic Drama
  • Serious drama with the characteristics of
    traditional tragedy with two exceptions
  • A happy ending
  • An optimistic world view
  • Eastern traditions employ this style often.
  • Sometimes known as romantic drama.
  • Western Examples
  • Cyrano de Bergerac (Edmond Rostand - 1897)
  • Saint Joan (Bertolt Brecht 1929-32)

8
Domestic Drama
  • The replacement of heroic drama, domestic
    (bourgeois) drama reflects modern society.
  • Domestic Indicates plays dealing with the
    family or the home
  • Bourgeois Indicates plays dealing with
    characters of the middle or lower classes
  • The power of domestic drama lies in its ability
    to present the audience with characters that are
    easily recognizable and identifiable.

9
Melodrama
  • 18th and 19th Century popular theater
  • music drama or song drama
  • Characteristics
  • The audience is drawn into the action.
  • The issues are clear-cut / strong delineation of
    right wrong
  • The characters are clearly good or bad
  • Exaggerated action Living in danger on the edge
    of calamity
  • Strong emphasis on suspense

10
Melodrama Today
  • Connections to film and television genres
  • Westerns
  • Soap Operas
  • Science Fiction
  • Horror
  • Melodrama can also reflect
  • the moral or political base of society.
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