The Choral Plot of Euripedes' Helen

Similar documents
The Nostalgia of the Male Tragic Chorus

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

euripides 2C702A5B0CCFEF4E43B76626EBB89912 Euripides 1 / 5

Unit Ties. LEARNING LINKS P.O. Box 326 Cranbury, NJ A Study Guide Written By Mary Medland. Edited by Joyce Freidland and Rikki Kessler

NAOMI A. WEISS. 214 Boylston Hall Harvard University Cambridge MA (510)

TRAGEDY: Aristotle s Poetics

NAOMI WEISS. 214 Boylston Hall Harvard University Cambridge MA

Monday, September 17 th

NAOMI A. WEISS. 214 Boylston Hall Harvard University Cambridge MA (510)

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

Greek Drama & Theater

Prometheus Bound (Greek Tragedy In New Translations) By James Scully, Aeschylus READ ONLINE

Drama. An Introduction to Classical Tragedy

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

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

Ancient Greek Literature By C. M. Bowra

Schedule of Assignments: introduction: problems and perspectives; background to the Homeric poems

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

Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes By Encyclopedia Britannica

Female Statues in Ancient Greece and Rome

Greek tragedies definition of Greek tragedies by The Middle English tragedie, from Old French, from Latin tragoedia, from Greek trag idi tragos, goat

The Bacchae And Other Plays (Penguin Classics) By John Davie, Euripides

a release of emotional tension

GREEK THEATER. Background Information for Antigone

Introduction to Greek Drama. Honors English 10 Mrs. Paine

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

The Structure and Performance of Euripides Helen

The Iliad & The Odyssey By Homer, James H. Ford READ ONLINE

Introduction to Greek Drama. LITR 220 Ms. Davis

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

Chapter 2 TEST The Rise of Greece

Mythology: Timeless Tales Of Gods And Heroes Free Ebooks

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

Course Outline TIME AND LOCATION MWF 11:30-12:20 ML 349

Final Syllabus. The Long Tour Destinations in Greece: Athens Delphi Delos Sounion. The Short Tour Destinations in Germany: Lübeck Hamburg

Copyrighted Material. Introduction

ANCIENT GREEK THEATRE By LINDSAY PRICE

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

JONATHAN FENNO Curriculum Vitae. SPECIAL INTERESTS Greek and Latin Poetry, Greek Religion, Ancient Athletics, Romans in Cinema

21H.301 The Ancient World: Greece Fall 2004

Introduction To Greek Mythology For Middle School

The University of Melbourne s Classics

COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION SAMPLE QUESTIONS

SECOND INTERNATIONAL MOISA SUMMER SCHOOL

Introduction to Antigone

Greek Tragedies, Volume 1 By Euripides, Sophocles

Theater. Mrs. Rittman Resource Guide for Theater History

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

CLAS 167B Classical Myths Told and Retold Course Syllabus (draft )

INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION: GREECE

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

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

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

Euripides: Ion By Euripides

ELEMENT OF TRAGEDY Introduction to Oedipus Rex DEFINE:TRAGEDY WHAT DOES TRAGEDY OFFER THE AUDIENCE??? Your thoughts?

Classical Studies Courses-1

Hesiod's Theogony: From Near Eastern Creation Myths to Paradise Lost by Stephen Scully (review)

Complementarity and Contradiction in Ovidian Mythography

Readings In Ancient Greek Philosophy Fifth Edition

Introduction to Savushun: A Novel About Modern Iran

AP ENGLISH (CLASSICS ACADEMY) In AP English Classical Literature and its Resonance, students study literature from the classic period including but

Greek Tragedy. An Overview

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

THE GOLDEN AGE POETRY

HEROES GODS AND MONSTERS OF THE GREEK MYTHS STUDY GUIDE PDF

Antigone by Sophocles

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

EGYPT EARLIEST RECORD OF PERFORMANCES 4,000 YEARS AGO WERE THREE DAY PAGEANTS RELIGIOUS IN CHARACTER RITUALISTIC LARGELY DEVOID OF DRAMA

Hesiod's Works And Days READ ONLINE

SOPHOMORE ENGLISH. Prerequisites: Passing Frosh English

Poetics (Penguin Classics) PDF

Greek Intellectual History: Tradition, Challenge, and Response Spring HIST & RELS 4350

Advice from Professor Gregory Nagy for Students in CB22x The Ancient Greek Hero

The Greeks. Classic Comedy and Tragedy images

Math in the Byzantine Context

d) Scene from Greece or Hair Spray e) Drumming performance and time signature test

Durham Research Online

Thematic Description. Overview

In 1925 he joined the publishing firm Faber&Faber as an editor and then as a director.

Aristophanes Birds By Aristophanes, Nan Dunbar

JANUARY 9/ Week 1: Meet at YRL. Introduction to scholarly resources, presentation from Classics librarian; Introductory lecture on Aeschylus.

Clst 181SK Ancient Greece and the Origins of Western Culture. The Birth of Drama

1) improve their knowledge and command of Attic Greek by reading, translating and discussing the Greek text of Euripides Medea in its entirety.

Homer and Tragedy: Persuasion

Mythology Research Paper Due Dates

DRAMA LESSONS BASED ON CLIL Created by Lykogiannaki Styliani

Summer Reading Assignment: Honors English I Harun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie ISBN:

A Brief History of Greek Choral Music

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

ESH/776 Greek Literature

Greek Tragedy. Characteristics:

Stephen Mcleod. Published by Utah State University Press. For additional information about this book

[University of Texas Press] Isocrates I (The Oratory of Classical Greece, vol. 4; Michael Read PDF Online

Version - 09/2009 CONSPECTUS DATABASE WORKSHEET - LC Library: Houston Cole Library Date: Music. By: LC LINE DIVISIONS, CATEGORIES and SUBJECTS

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.

Architecture The Parthenon

CLAS 131: Greek and Roman Mythology Spring 2013 MWF 2-2:50 Murphey Hall 116

Pro. Mary R. Bachvarova Office: ETN 307 x-6984 Office hour: T 4-5 (or me and we will arrange a time to meet)

CLSX 148, Spring 15 Research worksheet #2 (100 points) DUE: Monday 10/19 by midnight online

THE HESIODIC CATALOGUE OF WOMEN AND ARCHAIC GREECE

Transcription:

University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Departmental Papers (Classical Studies) Classical Studies at Penn 2013 The Choral Plot of Euripedes' Helen Sheila Murnaghan University of Pennsylvania, smurnagh@sas.upenn.edu Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.upenn.edu/classics_papers Part of the Classics Commons Recommended Citation (OVERRIDE) Murnaghan, Sheila. (2013). The Choral Plot of Euripedes' Helen. In Renaud Gagné and Marianne Govers Hopman (Eds.), Choral Mediations in Greek Tragedy (pp. 155-177). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. http://repository.upenn.edu/classics_papers/134 For more information, please contact libraryrepository@pobox.upenn.edu.

The Choral Plot of Euripedes' Helen Abstract In ancient Greek culture, the chorus was a social and religious institution, a musical form, and a medium for the telling of stories, but also a situation, an event, an experience, about which there were stories to be told. As the tragedians transformed traditional choral performance into the acting out of mythical narratives, they drew on those stories, both directly and indirectly, as sources and models for dramatic action. My concern here is with the chorus as a subject of tragedy as well as feature of tragic form, and with the place of choral experience in the inner world of the tragic plot. Most theories of the tragic chorus go outside that world to find the chorus' meaning: the chorus is identified with the playwright, whose views it supposedly voices; with an ideal audience (most influentially by Schlegel); or with the original fifth-century audience, whether as citizens of the polis (Vernant), ordinary observers of the rich and famous (Griffith), soldiers-in-training (Winkler), or regular participants in religious rituals (Henrichs). But the circumstances of being in a chorus, or of being an individual who interacts with a chorus, are also significant as elements within the fictional scenarios acted out on the tragic stage. Disciplines Arts and Humanities Classics This book chapter is available at ScholarlyCommons: http://repository.upenn.edu/classics_papers/134

CHAPTER 7 The choral plot of Euripides' Helen Sheila Murnaghan In ancient Greek culture, the chorus was a social and religious institution, a musical form, and a medium for the telling of stories, but also a situation, an event, an experience, about which there were stories to be told. As the tragedians transformed traditional choral performance into the actingout of mythical narratives, they drew on those stories, both directly and indirectly, as sources and models for dramatic action. My concern here is with the chorus as a subject of tragedy as well as feature of tragic form, and with the place of choral experience in the inner world of the tragic plot. Most theories of the tragic chorus go outside that world to find the chorus' meaning: the chorus is identified with the playwright, whose views it supposedly voices; with an ideal audience (most influentially by Schlegel); or with the original fifth-century audience, whether as citizens of the polis (Vernant), ordinary observers of the rich and famous (Griffith), soldiers-in-training (Winkler), or regular participants in religious rituals (Henrichs). 1 But the circumstances of being in a chorus, or of being an individual who interacts with a chorus, are also significant as elements within the fictional scenarios acted out on the tragic stage. The hexameter narratives that constitute our earliest surviving Greek texts contain several accounts of choruses, some of them descriptions of the chorus as an institution, in its recurrent, timeless, uneventful aspect. In the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, we find permanent, canonical choruses in both the divine and the human spheres: the Muses on Olympus (189-206) and the Delian Maidens in the world of mortals (156-64). But in the following example from the Iliad, the chorus figures as the situation out of Versions of chis paper were delivered at the Choral Mediations conference at Northwestern in October 2009, at conferences on "Moisa Epichorios: Regional Music and Musical Regions in Ancient Greece" (Ravenna, October 2009) and "Choruses: Ancient and Modern" (Oxford, September 2010) and at UCLA (February 2ou). I am grateful to the audience members on all of those occasions for their helpful comments, and to Andrew Ford and Deborah Steiner for sharing their unpublished work on the lyrics of the Helm. 1 Vcrnanc 1988: 33-4; Griffith 1995; Winkler 1990; Henrichs 1994/5. 155