Theatre Origins
Theatre Historians
Parts of Greek Theatre
Greek Playwrights
Terms
100

What is the difference between a ceremony and a ritual?

A ceremony 

  • Is a formal religious or social occasion, usually led by a designated authority figure such as a priest or chief

A ritual 

  • Is the acting out of an established, prescribed procedure, rituals can range from family events to Catholic mass 

100

Multicultural 

Multicultural historians focus on the groups who are underrepresented in the course of history. They review the ideological and political perspectives of these marginalized groups. They argue that there are unique approaches to theatrical arts within these cultures, because of their histories and their interactions within majority society

100

Proedria 

reserved front row seats for political and religious dignitaries. 

100

Who is Aristotle? Why is he important?

The Tragic Form 

According to Aristotle (The Poetics) drama has six elements:

- Plot 

- Characters

- Theme 

- Language 

- Music 

- Spectacle 

Tragic Hero in which the protagonists suffers because of a tragic flaw/hamartia. 

Schoolars tend to see the flaw of hubris (excessive pride) in Greek tragic characters

100

Hypokrite 

Greek term for "actor"

200

Theatre Practices in Egypt 

Abydos Ritual in ancient Egypt

  • 2,000 years from 2,500 to 550 B.C.E 

  • Osiris who was ruler of Egypt and married his sister Isis, was killed, recovered, and when to live in the underworld and become the judger of souls 

  • We do not have text for this ritual but we have a parcial account of someone who participated sometime between 1887 and 1849 B.C.E

  • People played roles of characters in the story and acted out episodes from Osiris’ life.

200

Feminist vs LGBT Historians 

Feminist argue that the place of women in theatre history has not be explored carefully, that women have been "invisible" in male-centered history. 

LGBT historians reevaluated the place of gay men, lesbians, transgender and bisexual populations in theatre history as well as the influence of sexual orientation on theatrical representation/creation

200

Theatron

"viewing place" 

The audiences sat in the theatron, the playing area for the actors was the orchestra, the scenic building was the skene (skene also has side wings called paraskenia)

200

Aeschylus

(525 - 456 BCE) 

1st to develop theatre into a separate form from singing, dancing, or storytelling. (Founder of Greek Theatre) 

Plays about noble families, lofty themes that were praised for lyrical poetry as well as dramatic structure and intellectual content. 

Only 7 of his plays still exist The Suppliants, The Persians, Seven against Thebes, Prometheus Bound, The Oresteia (Trilogy including Agamemnon, The Choephori, and The Eumenides)

200

Dithyramb 

In ancient Greece, a long hymn sung by a chorus of 50 men. By about 600 B.C.E, the dithyramb became a literary form that usually related heroic stories 

300

The Mayans and The Aztecs 

Maya, Incas and Aztecs in what is present day Central and south america part in performative activities, also often associated with religious rituals prior to European conquest

  • The Aztecs

    • Staged rituals that celebrate the seasons within festivals 

    • They also staged ceremonies dedicated to their deities 

    • Flowery wars were battles staged in full war garb

    • Included human sacrifice in order to gain goodwill if various deities 

  • The Mayan

    • People in rabinal in the central mountains of present day guatemala participated in Rabinal Achi meaning man of

    • Artifacts make clear that Rabinal Achi involved elaborate costumes and masks 

300

Revisionist vs Post Modernist 

Revisionism focuses on the idea that history has usually been told from the point of view of a social elite, as well as the idea that "mainstream" phenomena have been ignored since historians focus on what is revolutionary. 

Post Modernism is a theory that says positivist narratives, rationality, objective reality, and absolute truths do not exist. They argue that the past can't be retold in an objective and completely truthful way. Have greatly influenced feminist, multicultural, gay and lesbian historians/rebel against the canon traditional texts

300

Thyromata 

Thyromata: Simple one-story structure with several openings at back 

300

Sophocles 

(496 BCE - 406 BCE)

Introduces characters and information skillfully and then builds swiftly to a climax 

Focuses on exploration of character and the individual 

Was an actor in his own early dramas 

Single dramas instead of a trilogy + adding more action into the plots 

Only 7 tragedies survived Antigone, Oedipus the King, Electra, Ajax, Trachiniae, Philoctetes. and Oedipus the Colonus

300

Ekkyklema 

In ancient Greek theatre, a wagon used to bring characters onstage. Often to reveal the results of offstage violence 

400

What are some differences between rituals and theatre?

 efficaciousness and Methexis

  • Efficaciousness means that unlike theatre rituals and ceremonies are intended to achieve results such as affecting the weather, honoring the gods, bringing victory in battle, receiving forgiveness or better the world.

    • Theatre can a serve a number of purposes

    • Challenging people to think and feel but always focuses on humans



  • Methexis: Group sharing

    • Means that in many rituals and ceremonies there is not the same distinction between audience and performer

    • European theatre is meant to affect the audience - to entertain or to teach - the purpose of the African tradition is to embody or to be

400

Marxist/Class Oriented vs Post Colonialist 

Marxist and Class Oriented historians focus on how theatre reflects economic and political oppression. They are interested in hegemonic theory: how historic phenomena reflect power structures in a given society.  They explore how the profit motive and capitalism affect theatrical arts. Class oriented historians review how certain classes were privileged and others excluded from the theatre in different societies.

Post colonial historians study the relationship of theatrical art created during colonial occupations and how the theatres of subjugated people reflected resistance, attempts to hold on to traditional forms/oppression. They may explore the changes in the theatre and drama of colonized nations following independence. 

400

Proskenion / Parados  

Proskenion: The stage, it was quite 8-13 ft high, stretching 140 ft, and 6-14 ft deep. This type of stage housed the first productions of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides.

Parados: In classical Greek drama, the scene in which the chorus enters. The entrance way for the chorus in Greek theatre

400

Euripides 

(480 - 406 BCE) 

The most "Modern"

Characters behaved as everyday people did although this was deemed as inappropriate for tragedy. 

"weak" plots, diminished chorus, a mix of comedy and tragedy 

Portrayed Gods as human and fallible to undermine traditional morals 

18 plays still exist a few are Medea, Hippolytus, The Children of Heracles, Andromache, and The Trojan Woman

400

Periaktoi

In ancient Greek theatre, a three-sided scenic piece that could be revolved to show the audience three different scenes 

500

What two cultures influenced the development of Greek Theatre?

  • Minoans - 2700 to 1450 BCE developed on the island of crete

  •   Known for its development of religion construction of palaces uses the column in arch and agrarian innovations

  • Mycenaeans - 1600 to 1100 BCE named for city southwest of Athens, known for its development for arch pottery and commerce 

  • These early Aegean civilizations had little to do with theatre but the direct influence of gods and heroes supplied Homer.

500

Semioticians and Iconographic Historians 

Semioticians argue that theatre historians should focus on the response of audiences to the various elements of a production (which function as signs and have inherent meaning for the viewer.)  They say that performance is undervalued in the study of theatre history with too much focus on literary text on descriptions of individual elements of theatre. 

Iconography is Greek in origin and means "image writing", historians that study this are interested in iconography review the symbolic meaning of the various theatrical elements (scenery, costumes, playbills). They read the meanings between contemporary society and the theatrical event its self.

500

What are Pinake/Periaktoi?

Pinake: a type of flat, a wooden frame covered with stretched fabric 

Periaktoi: a triangular stage device consisting of three painted flats hinged together, each showing a different scene.

Clifford Ashby (in classical Greek Theatre: New Views on an Old Subject) argued that Periaktoi were not used in the Greek era. 

500

Aristophanes

(448-380 BCE) 

Best-known comic playwright of the Greek Golden Age 

Plays reflect the social and political climate in Athens as it declined in power toward the end of the 5th century BCE. 

Eleven of the plays survive such as The Frogs, The Birds, The Clouds, The Wasps, and Plutus

500

Deus ex Machina

"god from a machine" 

In ancient Greek theatre, the convention of bringing in gods on a mechane (a crane of lever suspended from the top of the scene house.) The term now applies to any unjustified dramatic device used to resolve a plot, usually in the final moments 

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