Dionysus and the Origins of Tragedy



Greek drama has its origins in the Festival of Dionysus, an annual spring festival held in Athens each year.

Dionysus

life spirit of all green vegetation, esp. the grape vine
god of wine, intoxicated abandonment, ecstatic possession
polugêthês 'much-cheering'
not an Olympian god
yet ancient
Minoan-Mycenaean
linear B tablets at Pylos
no reciprocity
demands the whole of a person
transformation is essential
'twice-born'
Zeus and Semele
death at the hands of the Titans
rebirth and birth of humankind
worshippers known as bacchai
usually women: maenads
mania: not frenzy but heightened and intensified mental power
sought, through ecstatic dancing and wine, to become possessed by Dionysus
Euripides' Bacchai
Pentheus and Agave
god of ordinary people
Athenian festival established under the tyrant Pisistratus
theater flourished under democracy
the masked god
a mask on a column dressed with a cloth
masked actors
theater as transformation

Tragedy

tragodia: 'goat-song' or 'song w/ a goat for a prize' or 'song for a goat-sacrifice'
result of merger of Dionysiac cult and heroic myth and legend
theater thus was a sacred space
built in the temenos 'precinct' of Dionysus
theater developed from choral performances" chorus 'dance'
gradual additions of actors
focus of theater on circular dance floor, or orchestra, with a stage behind
10,000-plus spectators in the theater at Athens
reconstruction of hillside view of theater
behind the staging area was the skene, or 'stage building'
all actors were men
did women attend?
playwrights had total control
had many roles
actors
directors
choreographers
plays "produced" by a choregos
under direction of playwright
competitions
3 tragedies each day for three days
followed by a comic satyr-play
Sophocles won 18 times

Background for Oedipus

The Riddle of the Sphinx ('strangler'):
"There is on earth a two-footed creature, and a four-footed one with the same name, and also a three-footed, for it alone of all the creatures that move on the ground or through the air or in the sea changes its form. But when it walks on the most feet, then is the swiftness of its limbs the weakest."
Fifth century BCE religious scepticism in Athens
are prophecies valid?
can a prophecy be avoided?
Four prophecies presented in the play, listed according to the order they are presented in the play:
a) from Apollo to Creon: 'Drive the corruption from the land. Banish the murderer of Laius, or demand blood for blood (ll. 106 ff.); 3rd prophecy received.
b) Tiresias to Oedipus: 'you are the corruption; the double lash of your mather and father's curse will whip you from this land (l. 401, ll. 475-8); 4th prophecy received.
c) An oracle from the priests of Apollo to Laius that doom would strike him down at the hands of his own son (ll. 784-8); 1st prophecy received.
d) Apollo to Oedipus: you are fated to couple with your mother and kill your father (ll. 867-75); 2nd prophecy received.
Remember that the characters received these prophecies in a different order from that in which they are presented in the play.
Hamartia
Aristotle maintained that Oedipus falls through hamartia, a 'mistake' (often wrongly translated as 'tragic flaw').
If so, what is this 'mistake'? Is it pursuing the truth about the murder of Laius?
Or does it lie farther back in his past?


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