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Tragedy & The Tragic Hero. Aristotle defined tragedy as "the imitation of an action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself.". Sophocles. c.496-406 B.C. Lived through most of Athens ’ Golden Age
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Tragedy &The Tragic Hero Aristotle defined tragedy as "the imitation of an action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself."
Sophocles • c.496-406 B.C. • Lived through most of Athens’ Golden Age • Actor, playwrite, and elected official (imperial treasurer and general) • Portrays great misery in his works • Gained recognition at twenty-eight dramatic competitions • Won twenty-four first prizes over the next six decades (a record) • Produced 123 plays; only seven survive today
Oedipus Rex and Antigone • Two of Sophocles’ three “Theban plays” – three tragedies about King Oedipus of Thebes and his family. • Sophocles wrote these three tragedies over a thirty-six year period. • All violence takes place offstage; audience sees only the responses of those who must live with the truth or perish. • Important literary elements to the tragedy = IRONY, FORESHADOWING, FLASHBACK!
Tragedy • A form of drama where the protagonist comes to an unhappy end.
The three unities of Greek drama • Unity of action: the action should be one story line that maintains the interest of the audience • Unity of place: the action should be limited to a single location • Unity of time: the time represented should be limited to at most one single day
A tragic hero is: • Larger than life; seems invincible • Neither exceptionally virtuous or exceptionally evil • Often a lonely character • Nobler than the common citizen and is often of royal birth • Endowed with a tragic flaw, and doomed to make a serious error in judgment because of this flaw • Will fall from high esteem • Will realize they have made an irreversible mistake • Will meet a tragic end/death that they face with honor
Tragic Wheel Catharsis (purging) Tragic Hero Tragic Wheel Hamartia (Tragic flaw) Peripeteia (reversal) Anagnorisis (Recognition)
Hamartia • “Tragic flaw” • The hero is neither good nor evil, but rather very human with a moral weakness or error • Hubris or “excessive pride” is a common hamartia.
Anagnorisis • “Recognition” • This is the moment of comprehension when our tragic hero becomes aware of his hamartia. • Typically at this point the hero will attempt to rectify events all to no avail.
Peripeteia • “The reversal from one state of affairs to its opposite” • This is the point at which the hero realizes all is lost.
Catharsis • “The purging of emotions by the audience.” • A good tragedy will evoke both pity and fear in the audience. • All of the destructive actions that take place at the close of the drama lead to the release of this emotion.
Chorus • Group of 12-15 men who sing and dance in the orchestra during the plays. They often represent the collective community, but not necessarily the poet's thoughts.
Conventions of a Greek Tragedy • All of the actors were men. • Plays were performed outdoors. • Playwrights usually directed and acted in their own plays. • Typically there were only three actors and the chorus. If there were more than three characters the actors would simply change masks.
Conventions of a Greek Tragedy (cont.) • The actors wore masks in order to: have their characters be easily recognized by the audience, be heard by the audience (they contained megaphones), and to play multiple roles. • Greek plays were performed as part of religious festivals in honor of the god Dionysus, and unless later revived, were performed only once.
Conventions of a Greek Tragedy (cont.) • Tragedies almost exclusively dealt with stories from the mythic past (there was no "contemporary" tragedy). • Plays were funded by the polis (the “city state”), and always presented in competition with other plays, and were voted either the first, second, or third (last) place.