Chapter 4.2: Origins of Greek Theatre. Paleontology

Similar documents
The modern word drama comes form the Greek word dran meaning "to do" Word Origin

euripides 2C702A5B0CCFEF4E43B76626EBB89912 Euripides 1 / 5

Greek Drama & Stagecraft. Table of Contents History of Greek Drama Theaters & Actors Setting the Stage The Audience s Experience

Greek Drama & Theater

Chapter 2 TEST The Rise of Greece

Women in Groups: Aeschylus's Suppliants and the Female Choruses of Greek Tragedy

Antigone by Sophocles


TRAGEDY: Aristotle s Poetics

Department of Humanities and Social Science TOPICS IN LITERATURE AND SOCIETY SPRING 2016 ITB 213E WEEK ONE NOTES

Classical Studies Courses-1

The Shimer School Core Curriculum

Environmental Ethics: From Theory to Practice

Were you aware of the amount of research a costume designer is required to do? Explain. Do you understand how to integrate costume with character

The Nostalgia of the Male Tragic Chorus

An Analysis of the Enlightenment of Greek and Roman Mythology to English Language and Literature. Hong Liu

Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes By Encyclopedia Britannica

Keynote speech evolutionary biology Example of an existing collaboration and highlight of recent research results A Keynote

SOCI 421: Social Anthropology

GREEK THEATER. Background Information for Antigone

PROFESSORS: George Fredric Franko (chair, philosophy & classics), Christina Salowey

Plato and Aristotle:

COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION SAMPLE QUESTIONS

But, if I understood well, Michael Ruse doesn t agree with you. Why?

Classical Civilisation. Insert. General Certificate of Secondary Education Higher Tier June Unit 2H Greece and Rome: Drama and Life

What's All the Drama About?: The Development of Tragedy in Ancient Greece. Marsha D. Wiese

MODERN JAPAN: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION BY CHRISTOPHER GOTO- JONES

THE GOLDEN AGE POETRY

The following slides are ALL of the notes/slides given throughout the entire Greek Theatre Unit.

Poetics by Aristotle, 350 B.C. Contents... Chapter 2. The Objects of Imitation Chapter 7. The Plot must be a Whole

NOTES ON THE BIRTH OF TRAGEDY 5-9

Annotations on Georg Lukács's Theory of the Novel

Plato and Aristotle: Mimesis, Catharsis, and the Functions of Art

Endless Forms. Citation. As Published Publisher. Version

Introduction to Greek Drama. Honors English 10 Mrs. Paine

The earliest Greek theaters recall tragedy's origins in choral songs sung to local heroes and divinities.

DOWNLOAD OR READ : VESTIGES OF THE NATURAL HISTORY OF CREATION PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Media Contacts PI. Delia Nicholls +61 (0) Rebecca Fitzgibbon +61 (0)

The Odyssey (Ancient Greek) (Greek Edition) By Homer READ ONLINE

DRAMA Greek Drama: Tragedy TRAGEDY: CLASSICAL TRAGEDY harmatia paripateia: hubris

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG215 WORLD LITERATURE BEFORE Credit Hours. Presented by: Trish Loomis

Classical Studies Courses-1

Greek Achievements. Key Terms Socrates Plato Aristotle reason Euclid Hippocrates. Plato

FRIDAY, 26 APRIL 9.00 AM AM. Date of birth Day Month Year Scottish candidate number

fro m Dis covering Connections

Human Progress, Past and Future. By ALFRED RUSSEL WAL-

Classical Civilisation

Syllabus. L351: Attic Tragedy in Translation Spring Semester Course Instructor:

The Moral Animal. By Robert Wright. Vintage Books, Reviewed by Geoff Gilpin

IMAGINATION AT THE SCHOOL OF SEASONS - FRYE S EDUCATED IMAGINATION AN OVERVIEW J.THULASI

Warm-Up Question: How did geography affect the development of ancient Greece?

It s All Greek to Me

Aposematic Model vs. Sexual Selection Model of Human Evolution

The Odyssey (Knickerbocker Classics) By Homer READ ONLINE

Greek Tragedy. Characteristics:

Performing Arts in ART

Introduction to Greek Drama. LITR 220 Ms. Davis

THEATRE, COMMUNICATION & DEVELOPMENT. Susweta Bose

Aristotle. By Sarah, Lina, & Sufana

in order to formulate and communicate meaning, and our capacity to use symbols reaches far beyond the basic. This is not, however, primarily a book

Antigone: Origins of Greek Tragedy

ASSESSMENT TASK- Adjusted

Aristophanes Birds By Aristophanes, Nan Dunbar

Philosophy 2070, Aldo Leopold lecture notes Stefan Linquist January 12, 2011

University of Missouri. Fall 2018 Courses

To what extent can we apply the principles of evolutionary theory to storytelling?

CURRICULUM CATALOG ENGLISH 9 (2130) CA

Each multiple choice or true/false question is worth two points. One question asks for more than one answer, so each answer is a point each.

a release of emotional tension

Classical Tragedy - Greek And Roman: Eight Plays In Authoritative Modern Translations By Aeschylus;Euripides;Seneca READ ONLINE

WESTERN EUROPEAN STUDIES CERTIFICATE

A-LEVEL CLASSICAL CIVILISATION

English. English 80 Basic Language Skills. English 82 Introduction to Reading Skills. Students will: English 84 Development of Reading and Writing

INSTRUCTOR S MANUAL CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF GREECE

The Collected Dialogues Plato

The Jeffrey Rubinoff Sculpture Park

The Odyssey Of Homer... (Greek Edition) By John Jason Owen, Homer

Aristotle's Poetics By Francis Fergusson READ ONLINE

The Iliad / The Odyssey By Homer, Robert Fagles READ ONLINE

Monday, September 17 th

In order to enrich our experience of great works of philosophy and literature we will include, whenever feasible, speakers, films and music.

CURRICULUM CATALOG. English Language Arts 9 (4009) WV

Objectives: Performance Objective: By the end of this session, the participants will be able to discuss the weaknesses of various theories that suppor

Arkansas Learning Standards (Grade 10)

Greek Tragedy. An Overview

The Cambridge History Of Classical Literature, Vol. 1: Greek Literature (English And Greek Edition) READ ONLINE

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

THE BIRTH OF COMEDY Programme 2 - Making Athens laugh: the ancient sense of humour

2 Unified Reality Theory

PHIL 314 Varner 2018a Midterm exam Page 1 Filename = EXAM-1 - PRINTED - KEY.wpd

Evolution essay titles. Evolution essay titles.zip

Origin. tragedies began at festivals to honor dionysus. tragedy: (goat song) stories from familiar myths and Homeric legends

Image Fall 2016 Prof. Mikhail Iampolski

SOPHOMORE ENGLISH. Prerequisites: Passing Frosh English

The Poetics Of Aristotle By Aristotle

Science: A Greatest Integer Function A Punctuated, Cumulative Approach to the Inquisitive Nature of Science

COURSE TITLE: WRITING AND LITERATURE A COURSE NUMBER: 002 PRE-REQUISITES (IF ANY): NONE DEPARTMENT: ENGLISH FRAMEWORK

DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES. I. ARCHAEOLOGY: AR_H_A COURSES CHANGE TO AMS (pp. 1 4)

Kuhn Formalized. Christian Damböck Institute Vienna Circle University of Vienna

HUMAN NATURE REVIEW. ISSN Book Review

Transcription:

Paleontology the biological counterpart of history must build off a fragmentary record of the past and nonrandomly selected data e.g. bias in favor of hardbodied creatures like trilobites

British naturalist (1809-1882) father of evolution Charles Darwin posited a model of evolution based on gradual change over time

Transitional Forms gradualism predicates the existence of transitional forms bridging changes in evolution but these are very few in number, especially near critical junctures like the Permian/Triassic boundary is it right to use a model of change based on gradualism here or in theatre history?

Punctuated Equilibrium a different model of evolution championed by the late Steven Jay Gould punk eek seeks to address how evolution occurs at the great watershed moments in evolutionary history equilibrium: long periods of relative stability punctuation: quick and dramatic disruptions

Punctuated Equilibrium when crises like that at the Permian- Triassic boundary occur, how do species survive at all? even if individuals are not threatened, their environment and food source/s (niches) are endangered they must adapt quickly or starve cf. cats/dogs/squirrels model in Chapter 4

Fitness in such a case, what constitutes fitness for survival sometimes it is just a fortuitous habit like the deep sleep of nautiloids it can also be nothing more than flexibility and luck

Punk Eek and Theatre History if Frazer can apply Darwinian gradualism in reconstructing cultural history, can we not apply a punk-eek model? we can if we see Greek tragedy as fitting into an entertainment niche it was one of many genres which over time served the needs of the ancient Greeks for diversion and entertainment

Punk Eek and Theatre History the Greek entertainment niche seen evolutionarily: early dominance of epic, especially Homer but epic collapses ca. 650 BCE

Punk Eek and Theatre History the Greek entertainment niche seen evolutionarily: lyric poetry rises to fill the niche but its limitations proved fatal in the long run for instance, lyric poets could not tell long and complex stories the way Homer could

Punk Eek and Theatre History the Greek entertainment niche seen evolutionarily: worse yet, without reinforcement the stories upon which epic had been built could lapse entirely from public conscience and memory the niche was open for a form of entertainment which could be both lyric (fast, complex, intense) and epic (stately, built around traditional myth, full of gravity)

Punk Eek and Theatre History when applied to the rise of Greek tragedy, a punk-eek model explains our failure to uncover transitional forms there were very few transitional forms since the change had to happen quickly they aren t likely to leave traces because there weren t very many to begin with

Punk Eek and Theatre History punk eek also allows us to avoid cultural Darwinism the tendency to see modern art as the inevitable and predictable consequence of a civilization s evolution over time we can avoid the fallacy of final forms cf. Aristotle s claim that tragedy came to a stop, when it attained its own nature

Punk Eek and Theatre History it also explains the presence of dithyramb so Aristotle was correct to some extent about the importance of dithyramb but dithyramb is not the progenitor of tragedy, rather an ultimately unsuccessful rival for the pre-classical Greek entertainment niche choruses at heroes tombs is another example

Conclusion Greek tragedy was cobbled together from elements already present in the pre- Classical Greek world complex singing (from lyric poetry) impersonation and masks (from Dionysus worship) traditional myth (from epic) and it had to happen very quickly

Conclusion it was not a direct outgrowth of any of its cultural forebears (Frazer, Murray, Bieber) but at the same time it owed much to all of them it also depended on the genius of its early founders (Else)

Conclusion but Pisistratus is the most important founder of early tragedy because he gave it official sanction and financial backing the City Dionysia was part of his program to build the Athenian economy free to rich foreign merchants visiting Athens and buying Attic wares at the outset of the annual trading season

Conclusion thus, Greek tragedy was the product of a political compromise engineered by a savvy aging Athenian tyrant it allowed the worship of Dionysus but in an acceptable way it gave the public a hot, new form of entertainment it boosted the Athenian economy