Drama

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Drama Drama

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Drama. What Is Drama?. A drama is a story enacted onstage for a live audience. The Origins of Drama. The word drama comes from the Greek verb dran , which means “to do.” The earliest known plays . . . were written around the fifth century B.C. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Drama

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DramaDrama

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A drama is a story enacted onstage for a live audience.

What Is Drama?What Is Drama?

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The Origins of DramaThe Origins of Drama The word The word dramadrama comes from the comes from the

Greek verb Greek verb dran, dran, which means “to which means “to do.”do.”

The earliest known plays . . .The earliest known plays . . . were written around the fifth century were written around the fifth century

B.C. B.C. produced for festivals to honor produced for festivals to honor

Dionysus, the god of wine and fertilityDionysus, the god of wine and fertility

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A tragedy is a play that ends unhappily.

• Tragedies endeavor to display human limitations.

right and wrongjustice and injusticelife and death

TragedyTragedy

• Most classic Greek tragedies deal with serious, universal themes such as

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The protagonist of most classical tragedies is a tragic hero. This hero• is noble and in many ways

admirable• has a tragic flaw, a

personal failing that leads to a tragic end

rebelliousness

jealousy

pride

TragedyTragedy

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Greek TragedyGreek Tragedy Tragedy comes from tragos, the Greek word for a goat: fertility.

The first tragedies were mere dances around sacrificial goat.

The great Greek dramatists-Aeschylus,

Sophocles, and Euripides-wrote religious drama geared towards portraying the moral relation bet. Gods and men , having always an instructive moral purpose

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Oedipus: disease, famine. Parricide& incest. Gods are just: suicide of his mother& self inflected blindness are means of expiating his crime.

Pity& fear.

Purgation.

Milton:' calm of mind, all passion spent'.

Catharsis: Catharsis: Aristotle said that the function of tragedy was purgation of the feelings through the arousing of pity and terror.

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Greek vs Shakespearian TragedyGreek vs Shakespearian Tragedy Greek tragedyGreek tragedy: : no free will, the gods are in control of a man's no free will, the gods are in control of a man's

destiny.destiny.

Shakespearian heroShakespearian hero: has free will. Example : Othello &Hamlet.: has free will. Example : Othello &Hamlet.

Greek tragedies have so little influence on English drama because Greek tragedies have so little influence on English drama because of the immense difference bet. the Greek view of life and the of the immense difference bet. the Greek view of life and the Christian one: fate VS free will.Christian one: fate VS free will.

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A comedy is a play that ends happily. The plot usually centers on a romantic conflict.

boy meets girl boy loses girl boy wins girl

ComedyComedy

Comedy comes from the Greek komos, meaning a revel, the sort of rough country party which honored the god Dionysus(god of vegetation).

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Roman drama assumed more influence on English drama,

particularly Seneca: the gods may have the monopoly of power but not of virtue.

Greek and Roman comedies:The main purpose of classical comedy is to make us laugh at the follies of mankind and correct those follies in ourselves.

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Dramatic unities:Dramatic unities:One admirable thing about the Greek tragic dramatists is their sense of form.

The traditional unities of Greek drama-one plot(action), one day(time).Renaissance dramatists Added a third unity , that of place. Shakespeare emerged to violate all these unities.

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The EndThe End