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(4th century) He defines poetry as the mimetic (imitative) use of language, rhythm, & harmony, separately or in combination. Poetry is mimetic b/c it creates a representation of objects/events in the world, unlike philosophy, which presents ideas. Humans are naturally drawn to imitation, so poetry has a strong pull on us. |
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c. 523-456 BCE
Earliest exixsting Greek tradgedies (that we know of)
Wrote Agamemnon (458 BCE)
Wrote first play about current events (The Persians) which is the earliest play we have intact
Introduced 2nd actor
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c. 496-406 BCE
Wrote Oedipus Rex , also known as Oedipus the King (ca. 430-425 BCE) and Antigone (ca. 442 BCE)
Added third actor, made chorus bigger
Most decorated of the Greek tragic playwrights (24 Dionysus festival wins)
Focused more on emphasizing/developing individual characters
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c. 480-406 BCE
Medea (431 BCE)
Youngest of Greek tragic playwrights
Known for:
melodrama & irony- "created some of the most extreme situations/events ever depicted on the Greek stage"
characters who aren't nobility- more relatable/realistic
writing about women |
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c. 448-380 BCE
Lysistrata (411 BCE)
Only comedic Greek playwright (that we know of)
→"Old Comedy"
His life bridges Classic Greek theater to fall of Athens
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Greek word for imitation; not abstract but representation
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In order of importance:
1. plot (fable)
2. character
3. thought
4. diction (speech)
5. music (melody/song)
6. spectacle |
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reversal (peripety, peripeteia) |
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The reversal from one state of affairs to its opposite. Some element in the plot effects a reversal, so that the hero who thought he was in good shape suddenly finds that all is lost, or vice versa.
From Aritotle Poetics
Ex. Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex |
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recognition/discovery (anagnorisis)
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A change from ignorance to knowledge. This discovery will bring love & happiness to characters who learn of good fortune, hatred & misery to those who discover unhappy truths. Connected to the plot when paried w/ reversal; together help arouse pity & fear, will also help draw the play to conclusion.
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scene of suffering/recognition (pathos) |
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Recognition on both plot & thematic level
Recognizing larger moral pattern
Suffering- culmination of the drama
From Aristotle Poetics
"Suffering; which we may define as an action of a destructive or painful nature, such as murderers on the stage, tortures, woundings and the like."
Ex. Sophocles Oeidupus Rex ending (poking eyes out) |
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tragic flaw or error (hamartia)
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The inherent defect or shortcoming in the hero of a tradgedy, who is in other respects a superior being favoured by fortune. An element of cosmic collusion among the hero’s flaw, chance, necessity, and other external forces is essential to bring about the tragic catastrophe. "error of judgment" (i.e. Oedipus) |
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Purging of emotion; relief
Pity for main character, fear for yourself
Physical purgation and/or Emotional (though vicarious experience
Poetics (6) - "[Tradgedy] in a dramatic, not in narrative form; w/ incidents arousing pity & fear wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such emotions" |
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Trading one line back and forth in between long poems or speeches (single epigrammatic lines of verse)
often used as a means to show characters in contention; to heighten emotional intensity of a scene.
Ex. Agamemnon |
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A stage mechanism consisting of a low platform that rolled on wheels or revolved on an axis and could be pushed onstage to reveal an interior or some offstage scene such as a tableau. |
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A building behind the playing area that was originally a hut for the changing of masks and costumes but eventually became the background before which the drama was enacted. First used c. 465 BCE |
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The flat area at the bottom where the actors are
Circular in early Greek theatre construction, the space between the audience and the stage; primary chorus performance space in Greek theater |
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Comedy that accompanies trilogies
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Ancient dramatic festival in which tradgedy, comedy, & satyric drama originated; held in Athens in March in honour of Dionysus, the god of wine. Attended by all Athenian citizens (maybe not women). Tragic poets wrote, produced, and probably acted in 3 tragedies on a theme. Judges awarded a prize to the best poet. |
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Person who fed and housed and trained the chorus; a patron of the arts/theater |
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A group of actors (men) who described/commented upon main action of play w/ song, dance, & recitation. The distinction btwn passivity of chorus & the activity of actors is central to Greek tragedies. The chorus expresses the fears, hopes, and judgment of the polity, the average citizens. |
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festive dances/songs to honor Dionysis
origins of Greek chorus |
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Literal origin: A crane in the amphitheater
Modern figurative: a person or thing (usually a god) that appears or is introduced into a situation suddenly and unexpectedly and provides an artificial or contrived solution to an apparently insoluble difficulty; bad writing
5th century BCE |
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