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  • Hey there.

  • I'm Mike Rugnetta, this is Crash Course Theater, and today is going to be a tragedy.

  • A Greek tragedy.

  • Which is a lot like a regular tragedy, only older and with more stuffed grape leaves.

  • We'll be exploring Aristotle's theories on this artform, written more than a century

  • after the golden age of Athenian drama.

  • Then we'll apply them retrospectively to the only surviving tragic trilogy we have,

  • theOresteiaof Aeschylus.

  • Get ready for some husband-killing, some mother-killing and, maybe unsurprisingly, the invention of

  • the jury trial!

  • INTRO Meet Aristotle.

  • Just Aristotle.

  • No last name.

  • Like Cher!

  • But older.

  • Also believes in life after love, though!

  • He was born in 384 BCE and lived in Greece and Macedonia.

  • He spent many years studying with Plato, a philosopher who wasn't a big fan of drama

  • or poetry.

  • Plato wrote that poets encourage a false vision of reality and should all be excluded from

  • the ideal state.

  • Wow.

  • Harsh, dude.

  • Luckily for us his pupil Aristotle was more open-minded.

  • In 335 BCE, a little while after he'd finished tutoring Alexander the Great, Aristotle sat

  • down to write The Poetics, the first substantial work of literary criticism.

  • Originally The Poetics was in two parts, a section on tragedy and a section on comedy,

  • but only the tragedy part survives.

  • Aristotle was writing 200 years after the City Dionysia really got going and 150 years

  • after the beginning of the golden age of Greek drama.

  • So the Poetics isn't really about analyzing contemporary work, it's about looking at

  • the work that came before Aristotle, deciding what's great about it, and providing a handbook

  • for future playwrights and audiences.

  • Aristotle was trying to stick it to Plato by proving poetry (and theatre) could be useful

  • to society.

  • He was a big fan of Sophocles and the rules Aristotle set out apply most closely to Sophocles's

  • ownOedipus Rex”, which you might remember from Crash Course Literature.

  • Club foot, murder, incest, stabbing out the eyesit's memorable stuff.

  • But Aristotle's theories apply, in many ways, to all of the works of Greek tragedy.

  • And often, we can gain a lot of insight through how ancient plays do or do not tick the boxes

  • that Aristotle set up.

  • And in fact, Aristotle's theories continue to influence how we write and think about

  • modern plays.

  • First off, the tragedy portion of Aristotle's Poetics considers several forms of poetry,

  • including the tragedy, and the epic, which is different in that it's mostly descriptive,

  • rather than imitative.

  • It tells rather than shows, like the dithyrambs we discussed last episode.

  • But!

  • We're here to talk tragedy which, Aristotle defines as:

  • An imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in language

  • embellished with each kind of artistic ornament, the several kinds being found in separate

  • parts of the play; in the form of action, not of narrative; through pity and fear effecting

  • the proper purgation of these emotions.”

  • So, Okay, a lot of this language is ambiguous, but there are some conclusions we can draw.

  • We're gonna go bit by bit: What does serious mean?

  • Well, there probably aren't a lot of satyrs and phalluses.

  • Complete?

  • Each play in a tragedy has to stand independent from other works in its trilogy.

  • That's lucky for us because as we discussed last time, invading .hordes have a bad habit

  • of burning libraries and we've lost a lot of plays.

  • Of a certain magnitude?

  • That's trickier, but if you read Greek tragedies you'll notice they deal with legendary heroes

  • or royal families, characters whose lives will have a sizable impact.

  • Also their difficulties are not minorthese are stories about murder, vengeance, betrayal

  • again: memorable stuff!

  • By language embellished, Aristotle means not only poetry, but also song.

  • In the form of action, not of narrative, means showing rather than telling.

  • And through pity and fear effecting the proper purgation of those emotions - that's catharsis,

  • and as we suggested last episode, it's kept scholars fearful and pitious for centuries.

  • We offered one explanation last time, that plays help make people better citizens by

  • purging them of emotions unhelpful to the city-stateyou have a good cry at the theater

  • so that you're not crying when it comes to making political decisions.

  • But scholars have argued that this catharsis is actually supposed to happen for the characters

  • onstage; there's been a lot of debate about whether the goal of catharsis is an emotional

  • purgation or an intellectual clarification.

  • Is catharsis supposed to awaken your emotions, or trigger some deeply rational thoughts?

  • Shockingly: EXPERTS DISAGREE.

  • Aristotle also said tragedy is composed of six parts: Plot, Character, Diction, Thought,

  • Spectacle, and Song.

  • They're important pretty much in that order, although he says that song matters more than

  • spectacle.

  • Take that, projection designers.

  • Wait

  • I've designed projections!

  • You don't want too much spectacle he says, because that's cheap and tragedy should

  • be enjoyable, but not, like, too enjoyable.

  • And Aristotle argues that even though it's characters we care about, it's actually

  • the plotthe tragic actionthat's most important.

  • You could have a character just like Oedipus, for instance, who doesn't kill his father

  • or marry his mother, butwell, that's not really much of a tragedy.

  • Aristotle believes that in order for a tragedy to really work, it needs to focus on a mostly

  • good character whothrough the tragic actionis then brought low.

  • If you have a mostly bad character brought low: Big whoop, they had it coming, no tragedy.

  • Same goes for a mostly good character who stays good: No pity, no fear, no catharsis.

  • An unimpeachably good character brought low doesn't work either, because the tragic

  • action has to be their fault, at least a little.

  • Aristotle writes that the ideal is to have a mostly noble and illustrious characterwhose

  • misfortune is brought about not by vice or depravity, but by some error or frailty.”

  • The word for frailty in Greek is hamartia.

  • It's a term that comes from archery and it means missing the mark.

  • Our tragic character doesn't have some horrible inborn flaw, but more like ... tries to do

  • a good job, and whiffs it.

  • Aristotle thought that a tragic plot needed to have three main elements: reversal, recognition

  • and a scene of suffering.

  • The Greek word for reversal is peripeteia; you might recognize it from the English word

  • peripatetic, which means walking back and forth.

  • Reversal means just when you think something's going okay, there's a change, usually signaled

  • by the arrival of a messenger, and then everything gets terrible again.

  • Someone's gotta start shooting these messengers!

  • Recognition, known as anagnorisis, is what happens when a character finally recognizes

  • something.

  • That was my mother!

  • That was my son!

  • I shouldn't have eaten that second piece of cake!

  • Oops.

  • Recognition combined with a reversal is best, Aristotle says: it automatically produces

  • pity or fear.

  • Maybe both!

  • Shortly after recognition comes the scene of sufferingexile, suicide, huge psychological

  • trauma.

  • It's fun stuff?

  • And just the kind of thing a healthy city-state would want to sponsor for the good of its

  • people!

  • To get a feel for some of these elements, let's take a quick look atThe Oresteia,”

  • the only surviving Greek tragic trilogy, which won first prize in 458 BCE.

  • It retells a mythical story, one covered, at least in part inThe Odyssey.”

  • Its three plays are: Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers and The Eumenides.

  • We'll look at the first two in the Thoughtbubble: Thoughtbubble

  • In the first play, the general Agamemnon returns to Argos from the Trojan War.

  • His wife, Clytemnestra, only pretends to greet him happily.

  • Why is she mad?

  • Because he sacrificed their daughter to make some winds blow, that's why.

  • (Does that sound like a similar plot point from an episode of Game of Thrones?

  • That show steals from the best!).

  • To make matters worse, Agamemnon has brought home his concubine, Cassandra.

  • Clytemnestra's lover, Aegisthus, is also ticked becauseget readyhis father, once

  • king, raped his daughter because an oracle said an incest son would get revenge on his

  • uncle who tricked his father into eating his now deceased half siblings.

  • His sister-mom, ashamed, disowns him so he's gotta work his way from GOAT FARMER back up

  • to royalty, which he DOES, but then is ousted by Meneleaus who installs ... AGAMEMNON as

  • king.

  • So, long story medium-short, Clytemnestra convinces Agamemnon to walk all on some TAPESTRIES,

  • which is a sacrilegious act, a sign that he's pridefulwhich he sorta isthus by ancient

  • tradition justifying his murder.

  • In some versions Aegisthus kills Agamemnon, in others it's Clytemnestra, but either

  • way he gets it ... in the bath no less!

  • In the second play, things go bad in Argos.

  • Electra, Agamemnon and Clytemnestra's daughter, is miserable.

  • Orestes, her brother, arrives in disguise and together they plot to murder their mother.

  • Which is usually frowned upon, but the chorus is all: Right.

  • On.

  • So, giving into their worst impulses, they kill Clytemnestra and Aegisthus.

  • Just when it seems like things might get back to normal, the furies, aka the Erinyes arrive.

  • The furies are scary snake-haired women who terrorize you when you've spilled family

  • blood.

  • They chase Orestes out of the palace.

  • Thanks Thoughtbubble, but the tragedy doesn't stop there.

  • In the third play, Orestes seeks shelter with the god Apollo, then heads to Athens.

  • He appeals to the goddess Athena and she arranges a trial for him, drafting twelve citizens

  • for the jury.

  • Orestes and the furies present their cases, the jury deadlocks, and Athena acts as tiebreaker.

  • The case comes down to whether it's worse to kill a mother or a husband.

  • Apollo argues that mothers aren't really parents, they're just hosts for the father's

  • seed.

  • I'M SORRY WHAT?

  • And then Athena is all like, “I was born from my father's forehead so I can totally

  • get behind that.

  • Orestes, you're free.

  • Furies, I'm changing your name to the Eumenides, the Kindly Ones, and making you the patron

  • goddesses of marriage and children.

  • Libations all around!”

  • So that's how we get the jury trial and some messed up ideas about parentage.

  • As you probably noticed, each of these three plays don't tick every Aristotle Box.

  • The third play has a non-tragic ending.

  • But we can see how the engines of Aristotelian tragedy drive these works: in each play, the

  • action is more important than the characters, who can seem somewhat flat and unconvincing.

  • Clytemnestra offers about six different motivations for her dastardly deeds, including that she

  • finds murder sexually arousingwhich is troubling.

  • But in every play, there's plenty of action.

  • In the first two plays, we can see mostly noble characters missing the mark.

  • Agamemnon agrees to walk on tapestries, Orestes decides to resort to violence.

  • There's suffering aplenty.

  • Taking the three plays as a whole, they show that the only thing to break the tragic cycle

  • of bloodguilt and vengeance is literal divine intervention.

  • Divine intervention, and jury duty--which was a pretty convincing way to remind the

  • audience of the importance of the city's democratic institutions!

  • Do these plays offer catharsis?

  • Well, that's gonna depend on how we interpret catharsis.

  • And of course it's also going to depend on how the plays are performed.

  • But in a strong production I'd say chances are good that you feel pity.

  • Or fear.

  • Or both.

  • Enjoy your purgation.

  • And then go vote with a clear head!

  • We'll see you next time for Greek comedy.

  • Yup.

  • All

  • the phalluses.

  • Andcurtain!

Hey there.

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