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5.1.2.2 Drama in Western cultures.

5.1.2.2.1 Greek origins.

The form and style of ancient Greek tragedy, which flowered in the 5th century BC in Athens,
was dictated by its ritual origins and by its performance in the great dramatic competitions of
the spring and winter festivals of Dionysus. Participation in ritual requires that the audience
largely knows what to expect. Ritual dramas were written on the same legendary stories of
Greek heroes in festival after festival. Each new drama provided the spectators with a
reassessment of the meaning of the legend along with a corporate religious exercise. Thus, the
chorus of Greek tragedy played an important part in conveying the dramatist's intention. The
chorus not only provided a commentary on the action but also guided the moral and religious
thought and emotion of the audience throughout the play: for Aeschylus (c. 525-456 BC) and
Sophocles (c. 496-406 BC) it might be said that the chorus was the play, and even for
Euripides (c. 480-406 BC) it remained lyrically powerful. Other elements of performance also
controlled the dramatist in the form and style he could use in these plays: in particular, the
great size of the Greek arena demanded that the players make grand but simple gestures and
intone a poetry that could never approach modern conversational dialogue. Today, the
superhuman characters of these plays, Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, Orestes and Electra,
Oedipus and Antigone, seem unreal, for they display little "characterization" in the modern
sense and their fates are sealed. Nevertheless, these great operatic tableaux, built, as one critic
has said, for weight and not speed, were evidently able to carry their huge audiences to a
catharsis of feeling. It is a mark of the piety of those audiences that the same reverent festivals
supported a leavening of satyr-plays and comedies, bawdy and irreverent comments on the
themes of the tragedies, culminating in the wildly inventive satires of Aristophanes (c. 445-c.
385 BC.) (see also Greek religion)
The study of Greek drama demonstrates how the ritual function of theatre shapes both play
and performance. This ritual aspect was lost when the Romans assimilated Greek tragedy and
comedy. The Roman comedies of Plautus (c. 254-184 BC) and Terence (c. 186/185-159 BC)
were brilliant but inoffensive entertainments, while the oratorical tragedies of Seneca (c. 4
BC-AD 65) on themes from the Greek were written probably only to be read by the ruling
caste. Nevertheless, some of the dramatic techniques of these playwrights influenced the
shape and content of plays of later times. The bold prototype characters of Plautus (the
boasting soldier, the old miser, the rascally parasite), with the intricacies of his farcical
plotting, and the sensational content and stoical attitudes of Seneca's drama reappeared
centuries later when classical literature was rediscovered. (see also Latin literature, Senecan
tragedy)

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