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Notes on Greek Drama

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The Greeks were the first to make drama a major part of culture. ... Breaking a performance into ... Antistrophe: The chorus moves from left to right ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Notes on Greek Drama


1
Notes on Greek Drama
  • Background Information
  • Conventions of Greek Drama

2
BACKGROUND ON GREEK DRAMA
  • Greek drama explores the human condition
  • The limits of knowledge.
  • Free will vs. destiny.
  • Moral responsibility.
  • Human suffering
  • So what? The Greeks were the first to make drama
    a major part of culture.

3
BACKGROUND (continued)
  • The conventions of modern drama trace back to
    Greek drama.
  • Convention a common characteristic.
  • Conventions the two share
  • Performing on a stage.
  • Breaking a performance into sections (scenes).
  • Following the archetypal story pattern
    (exposition, rising action, climax, falling
    action, resolution).

4
THE GOLDEN AGE OF ANCIENT GREECE
  • Greek drama appears during The Golden Age of
    Ancient Greece (500300BC).
  • Everyone went to see plays.
  • An important part of Greek culture.

5
CELEBRATING THE DIONYSIA
  • The Dionysia
  • Yearly celebration of the god Dionysus
    (wine/celebration).
  • Several days of holiday, where people drank lots
    of wine, celebrated, and went to see plays.
  • Going to the theater was a MAJOR part of the
    celebration.

Dionysus, god of wine and revelry
6
APPEARANCE OF THE THEATER
  • Keep in mind the following
  • The theater was completely outdoors.
  • There was no curtain.
  • There were few props, and they DID NOT change
    throughout the play.

Where the chorus performs.
Sketch this drawing in your notes.
7
Theater of Dionysus, in Athens
8
Greek Theater at Syracusa
9
What about the actors?
  • Wore huge masks and platformed shoes.
  • All male.
  • Only a few on stage at a time.
  • Actors played several roles by switching masks.

Compared to modern plays, think how strange it
would be to see plays acted out using masks like
these!
10
STRUCTURE OF GREEK TRAGEDIES
  • MAJOR POINT NO VIOLENCE ON STAGE. If violence
    is part of the story, the characters talk as if
    it happened somewhere else.
  • Prologue First scene of the play (exposition).
  • Parados Choruss first song.
  • Scenes Major divisions of a play (rising
    action).
  • Odes Chorus songs between scenesreview the
    action from the scenes. Divided into strophes
    and antistrophes of equal length.
  • Strophe The chorus moves from right to left
    while singing.
  • Antistrophe The chorus moves from left to right
    while singing.
  • Exodos The final scene of the play (climax,
    falling action, resolution.

11
THE THREE UNITIES
  • ALL Greek plays follow the three unities
  • Unity of time The plot of the story takes place
    in a single day.
  • Unity of space The setting of the story is one
    location.
  • Unity of action Everything in the story relates
    to a single plot (no subplots/side stories).

12
THE ARCHETYPAL TRAGIC HERO
  • This archetype originates in Greek drama
  • The hero
  • Is highborn / noble.
  • Has good intentions.
  • Is true to life (i.e. believable).
  • Has a reversal (a change in fortune for the
    worse).
  • Has a hammartia (Another word for tragic flaw.)
    The most common hammartia is hubris (excessive
    pride).
  • Experiences a tragic downfall, which is in some
    way his fault.
  • Experiences catharsis either a brutal punishment
    deserved or a brutal lesson learned.

13
THE GREEK CHORUS
  • All men, who wore masks.
  • Link between the actors and the audience.
  • Sometimes advises a character.
  • Separates scenes and summarizes action.
  • Represents some kind of community voice.

14
IRONY
  • Many Greek plays make use of irony. There are
    three kinds
  • Verbal irony.
  • Dramatic irony.
  • Situational irony.
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