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Chapter Ten, Lecture Two. Dionysus in Thebes Tragedy. Dionysus in Thebes. Best known story of resistance to the Dionysus told by Eurpides in his tragedy, the Bacchae
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Chapter Ten, Lecture Two Dionysus in Thebes Tragedy
Dionysus in Thebes • Best known story of resistance to the Dionysus told by Eurpides in his tragedy, the Bacchae • Dionysus in Thebes to spread his cult and to punish the blaspheme against his mother, Semelê, by her sisters Antonoë and Agavê
Dionysus in Thebes • The women and others are already in the mountains • The king, Pentheus, will oppose the cult • Even old Tiresias and Cadmus have put on the fawn skins and are going out • Dionysus, in disguise, is brought to Pentheus by soldiers
Dionysus in Thebes • Pentheus thinks that he is only a priest of Dionysus and taunts him. • Dionysus is led away; the palace is destroyed by an earthquake and Dionysus comes back • A report comes in about miracles and wonders being performed in the mountains by the Maenads
Dionysus in Thebes • Pentheus is about to go out with a force to capture the women, but Dionysus casts a spell over him • Pentheus now wants to see the “orgies” for himself • Dionysus helps disguise Pentheus as a woman and leads him away
Dionysus in Thebes • A messenger reports that Pentheus was killed by the Bacchantes • He was pulled down from a tree and torn to pieces • His own mother, Agavê, pulled off his head • Agavê comes on stage with the head on her thyrsus • She is shown by Cadmus what she has done
Journey to the Land of the Dead • Dionysus goes to the underworld to release his mother, who had died • Shown the way by a shepherd from Argos • Near the swamp of Lerna • Adorned the shepherd’s grave with a wooden phallus • The two become immortal and live in Olympus
Observations • Dio – • -nysos • son? • Nysa • Another name for Dionysus (Hence Nysai)
Observations • Eastern origins not doubted • Names • Semelê < Zemelô • Thyrsus < Hittite tuwarsa (vine) ? • Dionysus = Lydian bakivali ? • Myths • From Thrace or Phrygia and Lydia
Observations • A historical fact • A new cult being brought into Greece around 800 BC ? • But he’s in Homer and Linear B tablets • Etiological for viticulture ?
Observations • Myths contain many folktale elements • Hasty wish • Vengeful stepmother • “portion of the kingdom” (Proetus and Melampus) • Short-sighted fool
Observations • Deeper meaning begins with the fact he is god of fertility, preserved in epithets • he of the trees • god of blossoms • he of the black goatskin • followers called boukoloi (“bullherders”) • god of “wet” vegetation
Observations • A dying fertility god, like Dumuzi • Perhaps originally the consort of Semelê (Zemelô) • Resistance to his cult • But even devotees can be destroyed • Always depicted as a new and foreign god • Reflects perhaps Greek aversion to violence and irrationality
The Cult of Dionysus • Different from other cults • Olympians remote and known through their external works • Dionysus presence direct and personal
The Cult of Dionysus • “the god who comes” • enthousiasmos • ekstatis • lysios • sparagmos • ômophagia
The Cult of Dionysus • Cult appealed especially to women • Reflection of and reaction to their submissive social role? • Dionysus eventually tamed and give a civic role • Romans suppressed it • Christians thought Dionysus was a demon, but elements of his cult are similar to Christian practices and thinking
Dionysus, God of the Theater • Tragedies performed at the Lenea • “Festival of the Maenads (those of the wine vat) • Tragedies also at the City Dionysia • Three days of tragedies • Three on each day • Each day ends with one satyr play
Dionysus, God of the Theater • The relationship between theater and the cult of Dionysus is murky • Three main theories • Emerged from dithyramb (Aristotle) • Emerged from ritual performances (anthological) • Emerged from a lament for the dead hero
Dionysus, God of the Theater • Perhaps a better explanation sees it as a literary invention and political need • Aristotle: Thespis first added the actor to a choral song. This is the innovation to the old form • Aeschylus added a second actor, and Sophocles the third and final
Dionysus, God of the Theater • This innovation (Thespis) made around the time of Pisistratus (530 BC) • Pisistratus reorganized the old Dionysus festival and made it available to the dêmos of Athens • A citywide “drinking party” to celebrate the new order of things
Dionysus, God of the Theater • Origins of comedy even more obscure • Perhaps much older • Original Dionysiac kômos given dramatic elements – plot, setting, actors • Aristophanes the major source of information about the earliest forms of comedy