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Antigone and Greek Drama Notes

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Title: Antigone and Greek Drama Notes


1
Antigone and Greek Drama Notes
2
Greek Drama
  • Greek drama --honors Dionysos, the god of wine
    and fertility.
  • Thespis (thespians) transformed hymns sung to
    gods into songs that told the story of a famous
    hero.
  • Based on myths.

3
Types of Greek Plays
  • Tragedies were serious treatments of religious
    and mythic questions.
  • Satyr plays (named for wood demons) were comic
    and even unruly treatments of the same themes.

4
The Theater
  • The theater was a semi-circular (like football
    stadium).
  • Actors amplified voices through mouthpieces in
    their masks.

5
Greek Theater (cont.)
  • All actors men, and the choruses were
    well-trained boys.
  • By switching masks, each actor could play several
    roles.

6
Sophocles
  • Sophocles -- generally considered the best of the
    ancient Greek playwrights.
  • His plays always contain a moral lesson, usually
    a caution against pride and religious
    indifference.

7
Sophocles Innovations
  • Sophocles added a third actor to the original
    two.
  • He introduced painted sets.
  • He expanded the size of the chorus to fifteen.

8
Sophocles Theban Plays
  • These three plays tell the story of Oedipus of
    Thebes and his family.
  • Oedipus the King
  • Oedipus at Colonus
  • Antigone

9
Antigone Background
  • Since Greek audiences knew the story, suspense
    came from their knowledge of things the
    characters did not know dramatic irony.
  • The audience pitied these characters.

10
Oedipus Myth
  • See handout.

11
Theme of Antigone
  • Conflict in Antigoneindividual conscience at
    odds with established authorityis eternally
    relevant.
  • When we know that those in power are morally
    wrong, do we break their laws, or do we
    collaborate with them by obeying?

12
Tragedy
  • According to Aristotle, tragedy arouses pity and
    fear in the audience so that we may be cleansed
    of these unsettling emotions.
  • This idea is known as catharsis, a pleasurable
    sense of emotional release.

13
Tragic Hero
  • This character is not completely good or bad.
  • His/her misfortune is brought about by some error
    or frailty, which is the tragic flaw (hamartia)
  • The flaw is often hubris arrogance caused by
    excessive pride.

14
Tragic Hero (cont.)
  • The heros fall must be from a tremendous height.
  • Because of the tragic flaw, the hero is
    responsible on some level for his or her downfall.

15
Tragic Hero (cont.)
  • The hero comes to recognize his error and accept
    the consequences.
  • He is not angry he is humbled and enlightened.

16
Tragic Hero (cont.)
  • The audience, though, feels that the heros
    punishment exceeds his crime.
  • We see that the hero is flawed like us, and fear
    for ourselves because he failed.

17
Greek Theater Format
  • Plays opened with a Prologue that presented the
    background to situate the conflict.
  • The entering chorus sang a parodos, or opening
    song.
  • The choruss song, an ode, divided scenes and
    served the same purpose as a curtain does.
  • Chorus also provides summary or commentary and
    sets the mood.

18
The Chorus
  • During the odes, a leader, called the choragos,
    might exchange thoughts with the group in a
    dialogue.
  • During that recital, the group would rotate left
    to right, singing the strophe.

19
The Chorus (cont.)
  • The chorus would move the opposite direction
    during the antistrophe.
  • At the end, there was a paean (song of thanks to
    Dionysos) and an exodos (final exiting scene).
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