¡¡

Jesusi.com Homepage

¡¡

¡¡

 °Ô½ÃÆÇ  °Ë»ö  ÀÚ·á½Ç  »çÀÌÆ®¸Ê  ¿¹¼ö¿Í³ª?

[ µÚ·Î ] [ Ȩ ] [ À§·Î ] [ ´ÙÀ½ ]

¡¡
Literature

¹®ÇÐ ÀÔ¹®

5 DRAMA

5.1 Dramatic literature

The term dramatic literature implies a contradiction in that "literature" originally meant something written and "drama" meant something performed. Most of the problems, and much of the interest, in the study of dramatic literature stem from this contradiction. Even though a play may be appreciated solely for its qualities as writing, greater rewards probably accrue to those who remain alert to the volatility of the play as a whole. (see also  theatrical production)

In order to appreciate this complexity in drama, however, each of its elements--acting, directing, staging, etc.--should be studied, so that its relationship to all the others can be fully understood. It is the purpose of this section to study drama with particular attention to what the playwright sets down. A similar approach is taken in the following sections on the two main types of dramatic literature, Tragedy , and Comedy . The history of dramatic literature is discussed in the articles THEATRE, THE HISTORY OF WESTERN ; and ISLAMIC ARTS: e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">Dance and theatre ; and in the regional studies EAST ASIAN ARTS: e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">Dance and theatre , SOUTH ASIAN ARTS: e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">Dance and theatre , SOUTHEAST ASIAN ARTS: e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">The performing arts , and AFRICAN ARTS: e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">Literature and theatre .

 

5.1.1 GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS

From the inception of a play in the mind of its author to the image of it that an audience takes away from the theatre, many hands and many physical elements help to bring it to life. Questions therefore arise as to what is and what is not essential to it. Is a play what its author thought he was writing, or the words he wrote? Is a play the way in which those words are intended to be embodied, or their actual interpretation by a director and his actors on a particular stage? Is a play in part the expectation an audience brings to the theatre, or is it the real response to what is seen and heard? Since drama is such a complex process of communication, its study and evaluation is as uncertain as it is mercurial.

All plays depend upon a general agreement by all participants--author, actors, and audience--to accept the operation of theatre and the conventions associated with it, just as players and spectators accept the rules of a game. Drama is a decidedly unreal activity, which can be indulged only if everyone involved admits it. Here lies some of the fascination of its study. For one test of great drama is how far it can take the spectator beyond his own immediate reality and to what use this imaginative release can be put. But the student of drama must know the rules with which the players began the game before he can make this kind of judgment. These rules may be conventions of writing, acting, or audience expectation. Only when all conventions are working together smoothly in synthesis, and the make-believe of the experience is enjoyed passionately with mind and emotion, can great drama be seen for what it is: the combined work of a good playwright, good players, and a good audience who have come together in the best possible physical circumstances.

Drama in some form is found in almost every society, primitive and civilized, and has served a wide variety of functions in the community. There are, for example, records of a sacred drama in Egypt 2,000 years before Christ, and Thespis in the 6th century BC in ancient Greece is accorded the distinction of being the first known playwright. Elements of drama such as mime and dance, costume and decor long preceded the introduction of words and the literary sophistication now associated with a play. Moreover, such basic elements were not superseded by words, merely enhanced by them. Nevertheless, it is only when a playscript assumes a disciplinary control over the dramatic experience that the student of drama gains measurable evidence of what was intended to constitute the play. Only then can dramatic literature be discussed as such. (see also  Egyptian arts and architecture, ancient)

The texts of plays indicate the different functions they served at different times. Some plays embraced nearly the whole community in a specifically religious celebration, as when all the male citizens of a Greek city-state came together to honour their gods; or when the annual Feast of Corpus Christi was celebrated with the great medieval Christian mystery cycles. On the other hand, the ceremonious temple ritual of the early No drama of Japan was performed at religious festivals only for the feudal aristocracy. But the drama may also serve a more directly didactic purpose, as did the morality plays of the later Middle Ages, some 19th-century melodramas, and the 20th-century discussion plays of George Bernard Shaw and Bertolt Brecht. Plays can satirize society, or they can gently illuminate human weakness; they can divine the greatness and the limitations of man in tragedy, or, in modern naturalistic playwriting, probe his mind. Drama is the most wide-ranging of all the arts: it not only represents life but also is a way of seeing it. And it repeatedly proves Dr. Samuel Johnson's contention that there can be no certain limit to the modes of composition open to the dramatist.

 

5.1.1.1 Common elements of drama.

Despite the immense diversity of drama as a cultural activity, all plays have certain elements in common. For one thing, drama can never become a "private" statement--in the way a novel or a poem may be--without ceasing to be meaningful theatre. The characters may be superhuman and godlike in appearance, speech, and deed or grotesque and ridiculous, perhaps even puppets, but as long as they behave in even vaguely recognizable human ways the spectator can understand them. Only if they are too abstract do they cease to communicate as theatre. Thus, the figure of Death in medieval drama reasons like a human being, and a god in Greek tragedy or in Shakespeare talks like any mortal. A play, therefore, tells its tale by the imitation of human behaviour. The remoteness or nearness of that behaviour to the real life of the audience can importantly affect the response of that audience: it may be in awe of what it sees, or it may laugh with detached superiority at clownish antics, or it may feel sympathy. These differences of alienation or empathy are important, because it is by opening or closing this aesthetic gap between the stage and the audience that a dramatist is able to control the spectator's experience of the play and give it purpose.

The second essential is implicit in the first. Although static figures may be as meaningfully symbolic on a stage as in a painting, the deeper revelation of character, as well as the all-important control of the audience's responses, depends upon a dynamic presentation of the figures in action. A situation must be represented on the stage, one recognizable and believable to a degree, which will animate the figures as it would in life. Some argue that action is the primary factor in drama, and that character cannot emerge without it. Since no play exists without a situation, it appears impossible to detach the idea of a character from the situation in which he is placed, though it may seem possible after the experience of the whole play. Whether the playwright conceives character before situation, or vice versa, is arbitrary. More relevant are the scope and scale of the character-in-situation--whether, for example, it is man confronting God or man confronting his wife--for that comes closer to the kind of experience the play is offering its audience. Even here one must beware of passing hasty judgment, for it may be that the grandest design for heroic tragedy may be less affecting than the teasing vision of human madness portrayed in a good farce.

A third factor is style. Every play prescribes its own style, though it will be influenced by the traditions of its theatre and the physical conditions of performance. Style is not something imposed by actors upon the text after it is written, nor is it superficial to the business of the play. Rather, it is self-evident that a play will not communicate without it. Indeed, many a successful play has style and little else. By "style," therefore, is implied the whole mood and spirit of the play, its degree of fantasy or realism, its quality of ritualism or illusion, and the way in which these qualities are signalled by the directions, explicit or implicit, in the text of the play. In its finer detail, a play's style controls the kind of gesture and movement of the actor, as well as his tone of speech, its pace and inflexion. In this way the attitude of the audience is prepared also: nothing is more disconcerting than to be misled into expecting either a comedy or a tragedy and to find the opposite, although some great plays deliberately introduce elements of both. By means of signals of style, the audience may be led to expect that the play will follow known paths, and the pattern of the play will regularly echo the rhythm of response in the auditorium. Drama is a conventional game, and spectators cannot participate if the rules are constantly broken.

By presenting animate characters in a situation with a certain style and according to a given pattern, a playwright will endeavour to communicate his thoughts and feelings and have his audience consider his ideas or reproduce the emotion that drove him to write as he did. In theatrical communication, however, audiences remain living and independent participants. In the process of performance, an actor has the duty of interpreting his author for the people watching him, and will expect to receive "feedback" in turn. The author must reckon with this in his writing. Ideas will not be accepted, perhaps, if they are offered forthrightly; and great dramatists who are intent on furthering social or political ideas, such as Henrik Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw, and Bertolt Brecht, quickly learned methods of having the spectator reason the ideas for himself as part of his response to the play. Nor will passions necessarily be aroused if overstatement of feeling ("sentimentality") is used without a due balance of thinking and even the detachment of laughter: Shakespeare and Chekhov are two outstanding examples in Western drama of writers who achieved an exquisite balance of pathos with comedy in order to ensure the affective function of their plays.

 

5.1.1.2 Dramatic expression.

The language of drama can range between great extremes: on the one hand, an intensely theatrical and ritualistic manner; and on the other, an almost exact reproduction of real life of the kind commonly associated with motion picture and television drama. In the ritualistic drama of ancient Greece, the playwrights wrote in verse, and it may be assumed that their actors rendered this in an incantatory speech halfway between speech and song. Both the popular and the coterie drama of the Chinese and Japanese theatre were also essentially operatic, with a lyrical dialogue accompanied by music and chanted rhythmically. The effect of such rhythmical delivery of the words was to lift the mood of the whole theatre onto the level of religious worship. Verse is employed in other drama that is conventionally elevated, like the Christian drama of the Middle Ages, the tragedy of the English Renaissance, the heroic Neoclassical tragedies of 17th-century France by Pierre Corneille and Jean Racine, the Romantic lyricism of Goethe and Schiller, and modern attempts at a revival of a religious theatre like those of T.S. Eliot. Indeed, plays written in prose dialogue were at one time comparatively rare, and then associated essentially with the comic stage. Only at the end of the 19th century, when naturalistic realism became the mode, were characters in dramas expected to speak as well as behave as in real life. (see also  prosody)

Elevation is not the whole rationale behind the use of verse in drama. Some critics maintain that a playwright can exercise better control both over the speech and movement of his actors and over the responses of his audience by using the more subtle tones and rhythms of good poetry. The loose, idiomatic rhythms of ordinary conversation, it is argued, give both actor and spectator too much freedom of interpretation and response. Certainly, the aural, kinetic, and emotive directives in verse are more direct than prose, though, in the hands of a master of prose dialogue like Shaw or Chekhov, prose can also share these qualities. Even more certain, the "aesthetic distance" of the stage, or the degree of unreality and make-believe required to release the imagination, is considerably assisted if the play uses elements of verse, like rhythm and rhyme, not found in ordinary speech. Thus, verse drama may embrace a wide variety of nonrealistic aural and visual devices: Greek tragic choric speech provided a philosophical commentary upon the action, which at the same time drew the audience lyrically into the mood of the play. In the drama of India, a verse accompaniment made the actors' highly stylized system of symbolic gestures of head and eyes, arms and fingers a harmonious whole. The tragic soliloquy in Shakespeare permitted the hero, alone on the stage with his audience, to review his thoughts aloud in the persuasive terms of poetry; thus, the soliloquy was not a stopping place in the action but rather an engrossing moment of drama when the spectator's mind could leap forward. (see also  Ancient Greek literature)

 

5.1.1.3 Dramatic structure.

The elements of a play do not combine naturally to create a dramatic experience but, rather, are made to work together through the structure of a play, a major factor in the total impact of the experience. A playwright will determine the shape of a play in part according to the conditions in which it will be performed: how long should it take to engage an audience's interest and sustain it? How long can an audience remain in their seats? Is the audience sitting in one place for the duration of performance, or is it moving from one pageant stage to the next, as in some medieval festivals? Structure is also dictated by the particular demands of the material to be dramatized: a revue sketch that turns on a single joke will differ in shape from a religious cycle, which may portray the whole history of mankind from the Creation to the Last Judgment. A realistic drama may require a good deal of exposition of the backgrounds and memories of the characters, while in a chronicle play the playwright may tell the whole story episodically from its beginning to the end. There is one general rule, as Aristotle originally suggested in his Poetics: a play must be long enough to supply the information an audience needs to be interested and to generate the experience of tragedy, or comedy, on the senses and imagination. (see also  plot)

In the majority of plays it is necessary to establish a conventional code of place and time. In a play in which the stage must closely approximate reality, the location of the action will be precisely identified, and the scenic representation on stage must confirm the illusion. In such a play, stage time will follow chronological time almost exactly; and if the drama is broken into three, four, or five acts, the spectator will expect each change of scene to adjust the clock or the calendar. But the theatre has rarely expected realism, and by its nature it allows an extraordinary freedom to the playwright in symbolizing location and duration: as Dr. Samuel Johnson observed in his discussion of this freedom in Shakespeare, the spectators always allow the play to manipulate the imagination. It is sufficient for the witches in Macbeth to remark their "heath" with its "fog and filthy air" for their location to be accepted on a stage without scenery; and when Lady Macbeth later is seen alone reading a letter, she is without hesitation understood to be in surroundings appropriate to the wife of a Scottish nobleman. Simple stage symbolism may assist the imagination, whether the altar of the gods situated in the centre of the Greek orchestra, a strip of red cloth to represent the Red Sea in a medieval miracle play, or a chair on which the Tibetan performer stands to represent a mountain. With this degree of fantasy, it is no wonder that the theatre can manipulate time as freely, passing from the past to the future, from this world to the next, and from reality to dream.

It is questionable, therefore, whether the notion of "action" in a play describes what happens on the stage or what is recreated in the mind of the audience. Certainly it has little to do with merely physical activity by the players. Rather, anything that urges forward the audience's image of the play and encourages the growth of its imagination is a valid part of the play's action. Thus, it was sufficient for the ancient Greek dramatist Aeschylus to have only two speaking male actors who wore various masks, typed for sex, age, class, and facial expression. In the Italian 16th- and 17th-century commedia dell'arte, the standard characters Pantalone and Arlecchino, each wearing his traditional costume and mask, appeared in play after play and were immediately recognized, so that an audience could anticipate the behaviour of the grasping old merchant and his rascally servant. On a less obvious level, a speech that in reading seems to contribute nothing to the action of the play can provide in performance a striking stimulus to the audience's sense of the action, its direction and meaning. Thus, both the Greek chorus and the Elizabethan actor in soliloquy might be seen to "do" nothing, but their intimate speeches of evaluation and reassessment teach the spectator how to think and feel about the action of the main stage and lend great weight to the events of the play. For drama is a reactive art, moving constantly in time, and any convention that promotes a deep response while conserving precious time is of immeasurable value.

 

5.1.2 DRAMA AS AN EXPRESSION OF A CULTURE

In spite of the wide divergencies in purpose and convention of plays as diverse as the popular kabuki of Japan and the coterie comedies of the Restoration in England, a Javanese puppet play and a modern social drama by the contemporary American dramatist Arthur Miller, all forms of dramatic literature have some points in common. Differences between plays arise from differences in conditions of performance, in local conventions, in the purpose of theatre within the community, and in cultural history. Of these, the cultural background is the most important, if the most elusive. It is cultural difference that makes the drama of the East immediately distinguishable from that of the West.

 

5.1.2.1 East-West differences.

Oriental drama consists chiefly of the classical theatre of Hindu India and its derivatives in Malaya and of Burma, Thailand, China, Japan, Java, and Bali. It was at its peak during the period known in the West as the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Stable and conservative, perpetuating its customs with reverence, Oriental culture showed little of the interest in chronology and advancement shown by the West and placed little emphasis on authors and their individual achievements. Thus the origins of the drama of the Orient are lost in time, although its themes and characteristic styles probably remain much the same as before records were kept. The slow-paced, self-contained civilizations of the East have only recently been affected by Western theatre, just as the West has only recently become conscious of the theatrical wealth of the East and what it could do to fertilize the modern theatre (as in the 20th-century experimental drama of William Butler Yeats and Thornton Wilder in English, of Paul Claudel and Antonin Artaud in French, and of Bertolt Brecht in German). (see also  South Asian arts)

In its representation of life, classical Oriental drama is the most conventional and nonrealistic in world theatre. Performed over the centuries by actors devoted selflessly to the profession of a traditional art, conventions of performance became highly stylized, and traditions of characterization and play structure became formalized to a point of exceptional finesse, subtlety, and sophistication. In Oriental drama all the elements of the performing arts are made by usage to combine to perfection: dance and mime, speech and song, narrative and poetry. The display and studied gestures of the actors, their refined dance patterns, and the all-pervasive instrumental accompaniment to the voices of the players and the action of the play, suggest to Western eyes an exquisite combination of ballet with opera, in which the written text assumes a subordinate role. In this drama, place could be shifted with a license that would have astonished the most romantic of Elizabethan dramatists, the action could leap back in time in a way reminiscent of the "flashback" of the modern cinema, and events could be telescoped with the abandon of modern expressionism. This extreme theatricality lent an imaginative freedom to its artists and audiences upon which great theatre could thrive. Significantly, most Oriental cultures also nourished a puppet theatre, in which stylization of character, action, and staging were particularly suitable to marionettes. In the classical puppet theatre of Japan, the bunrakuthe elocutionary art of a chanted narration and the manipulative skill with the dolls diminished the emphasis on the script except in the work of the 17th-century master Chikamatsu, who enjoyed a creative freedom in writing for puppets rather than for the actors of the Kabuki. By contrast, Western drama during and after the Renaissance has offered increasing realism, not only in decor and costume but also in the treatment of character and situation. (see also  puppetry, Japanese literature)

It is generally thought that Oriental drama, like that of the West, had its beginnings in religious festivals. Dramatists retained the moral tone of religious drama while using popular legendary stories to imbue their plays with a romantic and sometimes sensational quality. This was never the sensationalism of novelty that Western dramatists sometimes used: Eastern invention is merely a variation on what is already familiar, so that the slightest changes of emphasis could give pleasure to the cognoscenti. This kind of subtlety is not unlike that found in the repeatedly depicted myths of Greek tragedy. What is always missing in Oriental drama is that restlessness for change characteristic of modern Western drama. In the West, religious questioning, spiritual disunity, and a belief in the individual vision combined finally with commercial pressures to produce comparatively rapid changes. None of the moral probing of Greek tragedy, the character psychology of Shakespeare and Racine, the social and spiritual criticism of Ibsen and Strindberg, nor the contemporary drama of shock and argument, is imaginable in the classical drama of the East.

 

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)

 

5.1.2.2.2 Biblical plays.

Western drama had a new beginning in the medieval church, and, again, the texts reflect the ritual function of the theatre in society. The Easter liturgy, the climax of the Christian calendar, explains much of the form of medieval drama as it developed into the giant mystery cycles. From at least the 10th century the clerics of the church enacted the simple Latin liturgy of the Quem quaeritis? (literally "Whom do you seek?"), the account of the visit to Jesus Christ's tomb by the three Marys, who are asked this question by an angel. The liturgical form of Lent and the Passion, indeed, embodies the drama of the Resurrection to be shared mutually by actor-priest and audience-congregation. When the Feast of Corpus Christi was instituted in 1246, the great lay cycles of Biblical plays (the mystery or miracle cycles) developed rapidly, eventually treating the whole story of man from the Creation to the Last Judgment, with the Crucifixion still the climax of the experience. The other influence controlling their form and style was their manner of performance. The vast quantity of material that made up the story was broken into many short plays, and each was played on its own stage in the vernacular by members of the craft guilds. Thus, the authors of these dramas gave their audience not a mass communal experience, as the Greek dramatists had done, but rather many small and intimate dramatizations of the Bible story. In stylized and alliterative poetry, they mixed awesome events with moments of extraordinary simplicity, embodying local details, familiar touches of behaviour, and the comedy and the cruelty of medieval life. Their drama consists of strong and broad contrasts, huge in perspective but meaningful in human terms, religious and appropriately didactic in content and yet popular in its manner of reaching its simple audiences. (see also  trope, Middle Ages, mystery play)

 

5.1.2.2.3 Into the 16th and 17th centuries.

In an account of dramatic literature, the ebullient but unscripted farces and romances of the commedia dell'arte properly have no place, but much in it became the basis of succeeding comedy. Two elements are worth noting. First, the improvisational spirit of the commedia troupes, in which the actor would invent words and comic business (lazzi) to meet the occasion of the play and the audience he faced, encouraged a spontaneity in the action that has affected the writing and playing of Western comedy ever since. Second, basic types of comic character derived from the central characters, who reappeared in the same masks in play after play. As these characters became well known everywhere, dramatists could rely on their audience to respond to them in predictable fashion. Their masks stylized the whole play and allowed the spectator freedom to laugh at the unreality of the action. An understanding of the commedia illuminates a great deal in the written comedies of Shakespeare in England, of Molière and Marivaux in France, and of Goldoni and Gozzi in Italy.

In the 16th century, England and Spain provided all the conditions necessary for a drama that could rival ancient Greek drama in scope and subtlety. In both nations, there were public as well as private playhouses, audiences of avid imagination, a developing language that invited its poetic expansion, a rapid growth of professional acting companies, and a simple but flexible stage. All these factors combined to provide the dramatist with an opportunity to create a varied and exploratory new drama of outstanding interest. In Elizabethan London, dramatists wrote in an extraordinary range of dramatic genres, from native comedy and farce to Senecan tragedy, from didactic morality plays to popular chronicle plays and tragicomedies, all before the advent of Shakespeare (1564-1616). Although Shakespeare developed certain genres, such as the chronicle play and the tragedy, to a high degree, Elizabethan dramatists characteristically used a medley of styles. With the exception of Ben Jonson (1572/73-1637) and a few others, playwrights mixed their ingredients without regard for classical rule. The result was a rich body of drama, exciting and experimental in character. A host of new devices were tested, mixing laughter and passion; shifting focus and perspective by slipping from verse to prose and back again; extending the use of the popular clown; exploiting the double values implicit in boy actors playing the parts of girls; exploring the role of the actor in and out of character; but, above all, developing an extraordinarily flexible dramatic poetry. These dramatists produced a visually and aurally exciting hybrid drama that could stress every subtlety of thought and feeling. It is not surprising that they selected their themes from every Renaissance problem of order and authority, of passion and reason, of good and evil and explored every comic attitude to people and society with unsurpassed vigour and vision. (see also  Renaissance art)

Quite independently in Spain, dramatists embarked upon a parallel development of genres ranging from popular farce to chivalric tragedy. The hundreds of plays of Spain's greatest playwright, Lope de Vega (1562-1635), cover every subject from social satire to religion with equal exuberance. The drama of Paris of the 17th century, however, was determined by two extremes of dramatic influence. On the one hand, some playwrights developed a tragedy rigidly based in form upon Neoclassical notions of Aristotelian unity, controlled by verse that is more regular than that of the Spanish or English dramatists. On the other hand, the French theatre developed a comedy strongly reflecting the work of the itinerant troupes of the commedia dell'arte. The Aristotelian influence resulted in the plays of Pierre Corneille (1606-84) and Jean Racine (1639-99), tragedies of honour using classical themes, highly sophisticated theatrical instruments capable of searching deeply into character and motive, and capable of creating the powerful tension of a tightly controlled plot. The other influence produced the brilliant plays of Molière (1622-73), whose training as an actor in the masked and balletic commedia tradition supplied him with a perfect mode for a more sophisticated comedy. Molière's work established the norm of French comedy, bold in plotting, exquisite in style, irresistible in comic suggestion. Soon after, upon the return of Charles II to the throne of England in 1660, a revival of theatre started the English drama on a new course. Wits such as William Wycherley (1640-1716) and William Congreve (1670-1729) wrote for the intimate playhouses of the Restoration and an unusually homogeneous coterie audience of the court circle. They developed a "comedy of manners," replete with social jokes that the actor, author, and spectator could share--a unique phase in the history of drama. These plays started a characteristic style of English domestic comedy still recognizable in London comedy today. (see also  Spanish literature, French literature, Restoration literature)

German dramatists of the later part of the 18th century achieved stature through a quite different type of play: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805), and others of the passionate, poetic Sturm und Drang ("storm and stress") movement tried to echo the more romantic tendencies in Shakespeare's plays. Dramatists of the 19th century, however, lacking the discipline of classical form, wrote derivative melodramas that varied widely in quality, often degenerating into mere sensationalism. Melodrama rapidly became the staple of the theatre across Europe and America. Bold in plotting and characterization, simple in its evangelical belief that virtue will triumph and providence always intervene, it pleased vast popular audiences and was arguably the most prolific and successful drama in the history of the theatre. Certainly, melodrama's elements of essential theatre should not be ignored by those interested in drama as a social phenomenon. At least melodramas encouraged an expansion of theatre audiences ready for the most recent phase in dramatic history. (see also  German literature)

The time grew ripe for a new and more adult drama at the end of the 19th century. As novelists developed greater naturalism in both content and style, dramatists too looked to new and more realistic departures: the dialectical comedies of ideas of George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950); the problem plays associated with Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906); the more lyrical social portraits of Anton Chekhov (1860-1904); the fiercely personal, social, and spiritual visions of August Strindberg (1849-1912). These dramatists began by staging the speech and behaviour of real life, in devoted detail, but became more interested in the symbolic and poetic revelation of the human condition. Where Ibsen began by modelling his tightly structured dramas of man in society upon the formula for the "well made" play, which carefully controlled the audience's interest to the final curtain, Strindberg, a generation later, developed a free psychological and religious dream play that bordered on Expressionism. As sophisticated audiences grew interested more in causes rather than in effects, the great European playwrights of the turn of the century mixed their realism increasingly with symbolism. Thus the Naturalistic movement in drama, though still not dead, had a short but vigorous life. Its leaders freed the drama of the 20th century to pursue every kind of style, and subsequent dramatists have been wildly experimental. The playwright today can adopt any dramatic mode, mixing his effects to shock the spectator into an awareness of himself, his beliefs, and his environment.

 

5.1.2.3 Drama in Eastern cultures.

Because of its inborn conservatism, the dramatic literature of the East does not show such diversity, despite its variety of cultures and subcultures. The major features of Oriental drama may be seen in the three great classical sources of India, China, and Japan. The simplicity of the Indian stage, a platform erected for the occasion in a palace or a courtyard, like the simplicity of the Elizabethan stage, lent great freedom to the imagination of the playwright. In the plays of India's greatest playwright, Kalidasa (probably 4th century AD), there is an exquisite refinement of detail in presentation. His delicate romantic tales leap time and place by simple suggestion and mingle courtly humour and light-hearted wit with charming sentiment and religious piety. Quite untrammelled by realism, lyrical in tone and refined in feeling, his fanciful love and adventure stories completely justify their function as pure entertainment. His plots are without the pain of reality, and his characters never descend from the ideal: such poetic drama is entirely appropriate to the Hindu aesthetic of blissful idealism in art. (see also  Indian literature, Sanskrit literature)

Some contrast may be felt between the idealistic style of the Sanskrit drama and the broader, less courtly manner of the Chinese and its derivatives in Southeast Asia. These plays cover a large variety of subjects and styles, but all combine music, speech, song, and dance, as does all Oriental drama. Heroic legends, pathetic moral stories, and brilliant farces all blended spectacle and lyricism and were as acceptable to a sophisticated court audience as to a popular street audience. The most important Chinese plays stem from the Yüan dynasty (1206-1368), in which an episodic narrative is carefully structured and unified. Each scene introduces a song whose lines have a single rhyme, usually performed by one singer, with a code of symbolic gestures and intonations that has been refined to an extreme. The plays have strongly typed heroes and villains, simple plots, scenes of bold emotion, and moments of pure mime. Chinese drama avoided both the crudity of European melodrama and the esotericism of Western coterie drama. (see also  Chinese literature)

The drama of Japan may be said to embrace both. There, the exquisite artistry of gesture and mime, and the symbolism of setting and costume, took two major directions. The No drama, emerging from religious ritual, maintained a special refinement appropriate to its origins and its aristocratic audiences; the Kabuki (its name suggesting its composition: ka, "singing"; bu, "dancing"; ki, "acting") in the 17th century became Japan's popular drama. No theatre is reminiscent of the religious tragedy of the Greeks in the remoteness of its legendary content, in its masked heroic characters, in its limit of two actors and a chorus, and in the static, oratorical majesty of its style. The Kabuki, on the other hand, finds its material in domestic stories and in popular history, and the actors, without masks, move and speak more freely, without seeming to be realistic. The Kabuki plays are less rarefied and are often fiercely energetic and wildly emotional as befitting their presentation before a broader audience. The written text of the No play is highly poetic and pious in tone, compressed in its imaginative ideas, fastidious and restrained in verbal expression, and formal in its sparse plotting; the text of a Kabuki play lends plentiful opportunities for spectacle, sensation, and melodrama. In the Kabuki there can be moments of realism, but also whole episodes of mime and acrobatics; there can be moments of slapstick, but also moments of violent passion. In all, the words are subordinate to performance in the Kabuki. (see also  Japanese religion)

 

5.1.2.4 Drama and communal belief.

The drama that is most meaningful and pertinent to its society is that which arises from it and is not imposed upon it. The religious drama of ancient Greece, the temple drama of early India and Japan, the mystery cycles of medieval Europe, all have in common more than their religious content: when the theatre is a place of worship, its drama goes to the roots of belief in a particular community. The dramatic experience becomes a natural extension of man's life both as an individual and as a social being. The content of the mystery cycles speaks formally for the orthodox dogma of the church, thus seeming to place the plays at the centre of medieval life, like the church itself. Within such a comprehensive scheme, particular needs could be satisfied by comic or pathetic demonstration; for example, such a crucial belief as that of the Virgin Birth of Jesus was presented in the York (England) cycle of mystery plays, of the 14th-16th centuries, with a nicely balanced didacticism when Joseph wonders how a man of his age could have got Mary with child and an Angel explains what has happened; the humour reflects the simplicity of the audience and at the same time indicates the perfect faith that permitted the near-blasphemy of the joke. In the tragedies Shakespeare wrote for the Elizabethan theatre, he had the same gift of satisfying deep communal needs while meeting a whole range of individual interests present in his audience. (see also  York plays)

When the whole community shares a common heritage, patriotic drama and drama commemorating national heroes, as are seen almost universally in the Orient, is of this kind. Modern Western attempts at a religious didactic drama, or indeed at any drama of "ideas," have had to reckon with the disparate nature of the audience. Thus the impact of Ibsen's social drama both encouraged and divided the development of the theatre in the last years of the 19th century. Plays like A Doll's House(1879) and Ghosts(published 1881), which challenged the sanctity of marriage and questioned the loyalty a wife owed to her husband, took their audiences by storm: some violently rejected the criticism of their cherished social beliefs, and thus such plays may be said to have failed to persuade general audiences to examine their moral position; on the other hand, there were sufficient numbers of enthusiasts (so-called Ibsenites) to stimulate a new drama of ideas. "Problem" plays appeared all over Europe and undoubtedly rejuvenated the theatre for the 20th century. Shaw's early Ibsenite plays in London, attacking a negative drawing-room comedy with themes of slum landlordism (Widowers' Houses1892) and prostitution (Mrs. Warren's Profession1902) resulted only in failure, but Shaw quickly found a comic style that was more disarming. In his attack on false patriotism (Arms and the Man, 1894) and the motives for middle class marriage (Candida1897), he does not affront his audiences before leading them by gentle laughter and surprise to review their own positions. (see also  didactic literature)

 

5.1.3 INFLUENCES ON THE DRAMATIST

The author of a play is affected, consciously or unconsciously, by the conditions under which he conceives and writes, by his social and economic status as a playwright, by his personal background, by his religious or political position, by his purpose in writing. The literary form of the play and its stylistic elements will be influenced by tradition, a received body of theory and dramatic criticism, as well as by the author's innovative energy. Auxiliary theatre arts such as music and design also have their own controlling traditions and conventions, which the playwright must respect. The size and shape of the playhouse, the nature of its stage and equipment, and the actor-audience relationship it encourages also determine the character of the writing. Not least, the audience's cultural assumptions, holy or profane, local or international, social or political, may override all else in deciding the form and content of the drama. These are large considerations that can take the student of drama into areas of sociology, politics, social history, religion, literary criticism, philosophy and aesthetics, and beyond.

 

5.1.3.1 The role of theory.

It is difficult to assess the influence of theory since theory usually is based on existing drama, rather than drama on theory. Philosophers, critics, and dramatists have attempted both to describe what happens and to prescribe what should happen in drama, but all their theories are affected by what they have seen and read. (see also  literary criticism)

 

5.1.3.1.1 Western theory.

In Europe, the earliest extant work of dramatic theory, the fragmentary Poeticsof Aristotle (384-322 BC), chiefly reflecting his views on Greek tragedy and his favorite dramatist, Sophocles, is still relevant to an understanding of the elements of drama. Aristotle's elliptical way of writing, however, encouraged different ages to place their own interpretation upon his statements and to take as prescriptive what many believe to have been meant only to be descriptive. There has been endless discussion of his concepts mimesis ("imitation"), the impulse behind all the arts, and katharsis("purgation," "purification of emotion"), the proper end of tragedy, though these notions were conceived, in part, in answer to Plato's attack on poiesis (making) as an appeal to the irrational. That "character" is second in importance to "plot" is another of Aristotle's concepts that may be understood with reference to the practice of the Greeks, but not more realistic drama, in which character psychology has a dominant importance. The concept in the Poetics that has most affected the composition of plays in later ages has been that of the so-called unities--that is, of time, place, and action. Aristotle was evidently describing what he observed--that a typical Greek tragedy had a single plot and action that lasts one day; he made no mention at all of unity of place. Neoclassical critics of the 17th century, however, codified these discussions into rules. (see also  Aristotelian criticism, Ancient Greek literature)

Considering the inconvenience of such rules and their final unimportance, one wonders at the extent of their influence. The Renaissance desire to follow the ancients and its enthusiasm for decorum and classification may explain it in part. Happily, the other classical work recognized at this time was Horace's Art of Poetry (c. 24 BC), with its basic precept that poetry should offer pleasure and profit and teach by pleasing, a notion that has general validity to this day. Happily, too, the popular drama, which followed the tastes of its patrons, also exerted a liberating influence. Nevertheless, discussion about the supposed need for the unities continued throughout the 17th century (culminating in the French critic Nicolas Boileau's Art of Poetry, originally published in 1674), particularly in France, where a master like Racine could translate the rules into a taut, intense theatrical experience. Only in Spain, where Lope de Vega published his New Art of Writing Plays(1609), written out of his experience with popular audiences, was a commonsense voice raised against the classical rules, particularly on behalf of the importance of comedy and its natural mixture with tragedy. In England both Sir Philip Sidney in his Apologie for Poetry(1595) and Ben Jonson in Timber (1640) merely attacked contemporary stage practice. Jonson, in certain prefaces, however, also developed a tested theory of comic characterization (the "humours") that was to affect English comedy for a hundred years. The best of Neoclassical criticism in English is John Dryden's Of Dramatick Poesie, an Essay(1668). Dryden approached the rules with a refreshing honesty and argued all sides of the question; thus he questioned the function of the unities and accepted Shakespeare's practice of mixing comedy and tragedy. (see also  "Ars poetica," , "Art poétique, L' ", "Timber: or, Discoveries," , humours, comedy of)

The lively imitation of nature came to be acknowledged as the primary business of the playwright and was confirmed by the authoritative voices of Dr. Samuel Johnson, who said in his Preface to Shakespeare (1765) "there is always an appeal open from criticism to nature," and the German dramatist and critic Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, who in his Hamburgische Dramaturgie (or Hamburg Dramaturgy1767-69) sought to accommodate Shakespeare to a new view of Aristotle. With the classical straitjacket removed, there was a release of dramatic energies in new directions. There were still local critical skirmishes, such as Jeremy Collier's attack on the "immorality and profaneness of the English stage" in 1698; Goldoni's attacks upon the already dying Italian commedia on behalf of greater realism; and Voltaire's reactionary wish to return to the unities and to rhymed verse in French tragedy, which was challenged in turn by Diderot's call for a return to nature. But the way was open for the development of the middle class drame and the excursions of romanticism. Victor Hugo, in his Preface to his play Cromwell (1827), capitalized on the new psychological romanticism of Goethe and Schiller as well as the popularity of the sentimental drame in France and the growing admiration for Shakespeare; Hugo advocated truth to nature and a dramatic diversity that could yoke together the sublime and the grotesque. This view of what drama should be received support from Émile Zola in the preface to his play Thérèse Raquin (1873), in which he argued a theory of naturalism that called for the accurate observation of people controlled by their heredity and environment. From such sources came the subsequent intellectual approach of Ibsen and Chekhov and a new freedom for such seminal innovators of the 20th century as Luigi Pirandello, with his teasing mixtures of absurdist laughter and psychological shock; Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956), deliberately breaking the illusion of the stage; and Antonin Artaud (1896-1948), advocating a theatre that should be "cruel" to its audience, employing all and any devices that lie to hand. The modern dramatist may be grateful that he is no longer hidebound by theory and yet also regret, paradoxically, that the theatre of his time lacks those artificial limits within which an artifact of more certain efficiency can be wrought. (see also  drame bourgeois)

 

5.1.3.1.2 Eastern theory.

The Oriental theatre has always had such limits, but with neither the body of theory nor the pattern of rebellion and reaction found in the West. The Sanskrit drama of India, however, throughout its recorded existence has had the supreme authority of the Natya-shastraascribed to Bharata (c. 1st century AD), an exhaustive compendium of rules for all the performing arts, but particularly for the sacred art of drama with its auxiliary arts of dance and music. Not only does the Natya-shastra identify many varieties of gesture and movement but it also describes the multiple patterns that drama can assume, similar to a modern treatise on musical form. Every conceivable aspect of a play is treated, from the choice of metre in poetry to the range of moods a play can achieve; but perhaps its primary importance lies in its justification of the aesthetic of Indian drama as a vehicle of religious enlightenment.

In Japan, the most celebrated of early No writers, Zeami Motokiyo (1363-1443), left an influential collection of essays and notes to his son about his practice, and his deep knowledge of Zen Buddhism infused the No drama with ideals for the art that have persisted. Religious serenity of mind (yugen), conveyed through an exquisite elegance in a performance of high seriousness, is at the heart of Zeami's theory of dramatic art. Three centuries later, the outstanding dramatist Chikamatsu (1653-1725) built equally substantial foundations for the Japanese puppet theatre, later known as the bunrakuHis heroic plays for this theatre established an unassailable dramatic tradition of depicting an idealized life inspired by a rigid code of honour and expressed with extravagant ceremony and fervent lyricism. At the same time, in another vein, his pathetic "domestic" plays of middle class life and the suicides of lovers established a comparatively realistic mode for Japanese drama, which strikingly extended the range of both the bunraku and the Kabuki. Today, these forms, together with the more aristocratic and intellectual No, constitute a classical theatre based on practice rather than on theory. They may be superseded as a result of the recent invasion of Western drama, but in their perfection they are unlikely to change. The Yüan drama of China was similarly based upon a slowly evolved body of laws and conventions derived from practice, for, like the Kabuki of Japan, this too was essentially an actors' theatre, and practice rather than theory accounts for its development.

 

5.1.3.2 The role of music and dance.

The Sanskrit treatise Natya-shastra suggests that drama had its origin in the art of dance, and any survey of Western theatre, too, must recognize a comparable debt to music in the classical Greek drama, which is believed to have sprung from celebratory singing to Dionysus. Similarly, the drama of the medieval church began with the chanted liturgies of the Roman mass. In the professional playhouses of the Renaissance and after, only rarely is music absent: Shakespeare's plays, particularly the comedies, are rich with song, and the skill with which he pursues dramatic ends with musical help is a study in itself. Molière conceived most of his plays as comedy-ballets, and much of his verbal style derives directly from the balletic qualities of the commedia. The popularity of opera in the 18th century led variously to John Gay's prototype for satirical ballad-opera, The Beggar's Opera (1728), the opera buffa in Italy, and the opéra comique in France. The development of these forms, however, resulted in the belittling of the written drama, with the notable exception of the parodistic wit of W.S. Gilbert (1836-1911). It is worth noting, however, that the most successful modern "musicals" lean heavily on their literary sources. Today, two of the strongest influences on contemporary theatre are those of Bertolt Brecht, who believed that a dialectical theatre should employ music not merely as a background embellishment but as an equal voice with the actor's, and of Antonin Artaud, who argued that the theatre experience should subordinate the literary text to mime, music, and spectacle. Since it is evident that drama often involves a balance of the arts, an understanding of their interrelationships is proper to a study of dramatic literature. (see also  music, history of)

 

5.1.3.3 The influence of theatre design.

Though apparently an elementary matter, the shape of the stage and auditorium probably offers the greatest single control over the text of the play that can be measured and tested. Moreover, it is arguable that the playhouse architecture dictates more than any other single factor the style of a play, the conventions of its acting, and the quality of dramatic effect felt by its audience. The shape of the theatre is always changing, so that to investigate its function is both to understand the past and to anticipate the future. Today, Western theatre is in the process of breaking away from the dominance of the Victorian picture-frame theatre, and therefore from the kind of experience this produced. (see also  stage design)

The contemporary English critic John Wain has called the difference between Victorian and Elizabethan theatre a difference between "consumer" and "participation" art. The difference resulted from the physical relationship between the audience and the actor in the two periods, a relationship that determined the kind of communication open to the playwright and the role the drama could play in society. Three basic playhouse shapes have emerged in the history of the theatre: the arena stage, the open stage, and the picture-frame. (see also  Victorian literature)

 

5.1.3.3.1 The arena stage.

To the arena, or theatre-in-the-round, belongs the excitement of the circus, the bullring, and such sports as boxing and wrestling. Arena performance was the basis for all early forms of theatre--the Druid ceremonies at Stonehenge, the Tibetan harvest-festival drama, probably early Greek ritual dancing in the orchestra, the medieval rounds in 14th-century England and France, the medieval street plays on pageant wagons, the early No drama of Japan, the royal theatre of Cambodia. Characteristic of all these theatres is the bringing together of whole communities for a ritual experience; therefore, a sense of ritualistic intimacy and involvement is common to the content of the drama, and only the size of the audience changes the scale of the sung or spoken poetry. Clearly, the idiom of realistic dialogue would have been inappropriate both to the occasion and the manner of such theatre.

 

5.1.3.3.2 The open stage.

When more narrative forms of action appeared in drama and particular singers or speakers needed to control the attention of their audience by facing them, the open, "thrust," or platform stage, with the audience on three sides of the actor, quickly developed its versatility. Intimate and ritualistic qualities in the drama could be combined with a new focus on the players as individual characters. The open stage and its variants were used by the majority of great national theatres, particularly those of China and Japan, the booths of the Italian commedia, the Elizabethan public and private playhouses, and the Spanish corrales (i.e., the areas between town houses) of the Renaissance. While open-stage performance discouraged scenic elaboration, it stressed the actor and his role, his playing to and away from the spectators, with the consequent subtleties of empathy and alienation. It permitted high style in speech and behaviour, yet it could also accommodate moments of the colloquial and the realistic. It encouraged a drama of range and versatility, with rapid changes of mood and great flexibility of tone. It is not surprising that in the 20th century the West has seen a return to the open stage and that recent plays of Brechtian theatre and the theatre of the absurd seem composed for open staging.

 

5.1.3.3.3 The proscenium stage.

The third basic theatre form is that of the proscenium-arch or picture-frame stage, which reached its highest achievements in the late 19th century. Not until public theatres were roofed, the actors withdrawn into the scene, and the stage artifically illuminated were conditions ripe in Western theatre for a new development of spectacle and illusion. This development had a revolutionary effect upon the literary drama. In the 18th and 19th centuries, plays were shaped into a new structure of acts and scenes, with intermissions to permit scene changes. Only recently has the development of lighting techniques encouraged a return to a more flexible episodic drama. Of more importance, the actor increasingly withdrew into the created illusion of the play, and his character became part of it. In the mid-19th century, when it was possible to dim the house lights, the illusion could be made virtually complete. At its best, stage illusion could produce the delicate naturalism of a Chekhovian family scene, into which the spectator was drawn by understanding, sympathy, and recognition; at its worst, the magic of spectacle and the necessary projection of the speech and acting in the largest picture-frame theatres produced a crude drama of sensation in which literary values had no place.

 

5.1.3.4 Audience expectations.

It may be that the primary influence upon the conception and creation of a play is that of the audience. An audience allows a play to have only the emotion and meaning it chooses, or else it defends itself either by protest or by a closed mind. From the time the spectator began paying for his playgoing, during the Renaissance, the audience more and more entered into the choice of the drama's subjects and their treatment. This is not to say that the audience was given no consideration earlier; even in medieval plays there were popular non-biblical roles such as Noah's wife, or Mak the sheepthief among the three shepherds, and the antic devils of the Harrowing of Hell in the English mystery cycles. Nor, in later times, did a good playwright always give the audience only what it expected-- Shakespeare's King Lear(c. 1605), for example, in the view of many the world's greatest play, had its popular elements of folktale, intrigue, disguise, madness, clowning, blood, and horror; but each was turned by the playwright to the advantage of his theme.

Any examination of the society an audience represents must illuminate not only the cultural role of its theatre but also the content, genre, and style of its plays. The exceptionally aristocratic composition of the English Restoration audience, for example, illuminates the social game its comedy represented, and the middle class composition of the subsequent Georgian audience sheds light on the moralistic elements of its "sentimental" comedy. Not unrelated is the study of received ideas in the theatre. The widespread knowledge of simple Freudian psychology has undoubtedly granted a contemporary playwright like Tennessee Williams (1911-83) the license to invoke it for character motivation; and Brecht increasingly informed his comedies with Marxist thinking on the assumption that the audiences he wrote for would appreciate his dramatized argument. Things go wrong when the intellectual or religious background of the audience does not permit a shared experience, as when Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-80) could not persuade a predominantly Christian audience with an existentialist explanation for the action of his plays, or when T.S. Eliot (1888-1965) failed to persuade an audience accustomed to the conventions of drawing-room comedy that The Cocktail Party(1949) was a possible setting for Christian martyrdom. Good drama persuades before it preaches, but it can only begin where the audience begins.

 

5.1.3.4.1 Special audiences.

A great variety of drama has been written for special audiences. Plays have been written for children, largely in the 20th century, though Nativity plays have always been associated with children both as performers and as spectators. These plays tend to be fanciful in conception, broad in characterization, and moralistic in intention. Nevertheless, the most famous of children's plays, James Barrie's Peter Pan (1904), implied that the young are no fools and celebrated children in their own right. Barrie submerged his point subtly beneath the fantasy, and his play is still regularly performed, while Maurice Maeterlinck's Blue Bird (1908) has disappeared from the repertory because of its weighty moral tone. (see also  children's literature, "Peter Pan, the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up")

In the wider field of adult drama, the social class of the audience often accounts for a play's form and style. Court or aristocratic drama is readily distinguished from that of the popular theatre. The veneration in which the No drama was held in Japan derived in large part from the feudal ceremony of its presentation, and its courtly elements ensured its survival for an upper class and intellectual elite. Although much of it derived from the No, the flourishing of the Kabuki at the end of the 17th century is related to the rise of a new merchant and middle class audience, which encouraged the development of less esoteric drama. The popular plays of the Elizabethan public theatres, with their broader, more romantic subjects liberally spiced with comedy, are similarly to be contrasted with those of the private theatres. The boys' companies of the private theatres of Elizabethan London played for a better paying and more sophisticated audience, which favoured the satirical or philosophical plays of Thomas Middleton (1570?-1627), John Marston (1576-1634), and George Chapman (1559?-1634). Similarly today, in all Western dramatic media--stage, film, radio, and television--popular and "commercial" forms run alongside more "cultural" and avant-garde forms, so that the drama, which in its origins brought people together, now divides them. Whether the esoteric influences the popular theatre, or vice versa, is not clear, and research remains to be done on whether this dichotomy is good or bad for dramatic literature or the people it is written for.

 

5.1.4 THE RANGE OF DRAMATIC FORMS AND STYLES

Dramatic literature has a remarkable facility in bringing together elements from other performing and nonperforming arts: design and mime, dance and music, poetry and narrative. It may be that the dramatic impulse itself, the desire to recreate a picture of life for others through impersonation, is at the root of all the arts. Certainly, the performing arts continually have need of dramatic literature to support them. A common way of describing an opera, for example, is to say that it is a play set to music. In Wagner the music is continuous; in Verdi the music is broken into songs; in Mozart the songs are separated by recitative, a mixture of speech and song; while operettas and musical comedy consist of speech that breaks into song from time to time. All forms of opera, however, essentially dramatize a plot, even if the plot must be simplified on the operatic stage. This is because, in opera, musical conventions dominate the dramatic conventions, and the spectator who finds that the music spoils the play, or who finds that the play spoils the music, is one who has not accepted the special conventions of opera. Music is drama's natural sister; proof may be seen in the early religious music-drama of the Dionysiac festivals of Greece and the mystères of 14th-century France, as well as in the remarkable development of opera in 17th-century Italy spreading to the rest of the world. The librettist who writes the text of an opera, however, must usually subserve the composer, unless he is able to embellish his play with popular lyrics, as John Gay did in The Beggar's Opera (1728), or to work in exceptionally close collaboration with the composer, as Brecht did with Kurt Weill for his Die Dreigroschenoper (The Threepenny Opera, 1928).

Dance, with its modern, sophisticated forms of ballet, has also been traditionally associated with dramatic representation and has similarly changed its purpose from religious to secular. In ballet, the music is usually central, and the performance is conceived visually and aurally; hence, the writer does not play a dominant role. The scenario is prepared for dance and mime by the choreographer. The contemporary Irish writer Samuel Beckett, trying to reduce his dramatic statement to the barest essentials, "composed" two mimes entitled Act Without Words I and II (1957 and 1966), but this is exceptional. (see also  theatrical dance)

In motion pictures, the script writer has a more important but still not dominant role. He usually provides a loose outline of dialogue, business, and camera work on which the director, his cameramen, and the cutting editor build the finished product. The director is usually the final artistic authority and the central creative mind in the process, and words are usually subordinate to the dynamic visual imagery. (This subject is developed at length in the article MOTION PICTURES: e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">The art of film .)

The media of radio and television both depend upon words in their drama to an extent that is not characteristic of the motion picture. Though these mass media have been dominated by commercial interests and other economic factors, they also have developed dramatic forms from the special nature of their medium. The writer of a radio play must acknowledge that the listener cannot see the actors but hears them in conditions of great intimacy. A radio script that stresses the suggestive, imaginative, or poetic quality of words and permits a more than conventional freedom with time and place can produce a truly poetic drama, perhaps making unobtrusive use of earlier devices like the chorus, the narrator, and the soliloquy: the outstanding example of radio drama is Under Milk Wood(1953), by the Welsh poet Dylan Thomas.

A similar kind of dramatic writing is the so-called readers' theatre, in which actors read or recite without decor before an audience. (This is not to be confused with "closet drama," often a dramatic poem that assumes dialogue form; e.g., Milton's Samson Agonistes1671, written without the intention of stage performance.) The essential discipline of the circuit of communication with an audience is what distinguishes drama as a genre, however many forms it has taken in its long history. (J.L.S.)

 

5.2 Comedy

The classic conception of comedy, which began with Aristotle in ancient Greece of the 4th century BC and persists through the present, holds that it is primarily concerned with man as a social being, rather than as a private person, and that its function is frankly corrective. The comic artist's purpose is to hold a mirror up to society to reflect its follies and vices, in the hope that they will, as a result, be mended. The 20th-century French philosopher Henri Bergson shared this view of the corrective purpose of laughter; specifically, he felt, laughter is intended to bring the comic character back into conformity with his society, whose logic and conventions he abandons when "he slackens in the attention that is due to life." Here comedy is considered primarily as a literary genre, but also is considered for its manifestations in the other arts. The wellsprings of comedy are dealt with in the article HUMOUR AND WIT . The comic impulse in the visual arts is discussed in CARICATURE, CARTOON, AND COMIC STRIP .

 

5.2.1 ORIGINS AND DEFINITIONS

The word comedy seems to be connected by derivation with the Greek verb meaning "to revel," and comedy arose out of the revels associated with the rites of Dionysus, a god of vegetation. The origins of comedy are thus bound up with vegetation ritual. Aristotle, in his Poeticsstates that comedy originated in phallic songs and that, like tragedy, it began in improvisation. Though tragedy evolved by stages that can be traced, the progress of comedy passed unnoticed because it was not taken seriously. When tragedy and comedy arose, poets wrote one or the other, according to their natural bent. Those of the graver sort, who might previously have been inclined to celebrate the actions of the great in epic poetry, turned to tragedy; poets of a lower type, who had set forth the doings of the ignoble in invectives, turned to comedy. The distinction is basic to the Aristotelian differentiation between tragedy and comedy: tragedy imitates men who are better than the average, and comedy men who are worse. (see also  Ancient Greek literature, Greek religion, phallic symbol)

For centuries, efforts at defining comedy were to be along the lines set down by Aristotle: the view that tragedy deals with personages of high estate, and comedy deals with lowly types; that tragedy treats of matters of great public import, while comedy is concerned with the private affairs of mundane life; and that the characters and events of tragedy are historic and so, in some sense, true, while the humbler materials of comedy are but feigned. Implicit, too, in Aristotle is the distinction in styles deemed appropriate to the treatment of tragic and comic story. As long as there was at least a theoretical separation of comic and tragic styles, either genre could, on occasion, appropriate the stylistic manner of the other to a striking effect, which was never possible after the crossing of stylistic lines became commonplace. The ancient Roman poet Horace, who wrote on such stylistic differences, noted the special effects that can be achieved when comedy lifts its voice in pseudotragic rant and when tragedy adopts the prosaic but affecting language of comedy. Consciously combined, the mixture of styles produces the burlesque, in which the grand manner (epic or tragic) is applied to a trivial subject, or the serious subject is subjected to a vulgar treatment, to ludicrous effect. The English novelist Henry Fielding, in the preface to Joseph Andrews(1742), was careful to distinguish between the comic and the burlesque; the latter centres on the monstrous and unnatural and gives pleasure through the surprising absurdity it exhibits in appropriating the manners of the highest to the lowest, or vice versa. Comedy, on the other hand, confines itself to the imitation of nature, and, according to Fielding, the comic artist is not to be excused for deviating from it. His subject is the ridiculous, not the monstrous, as with the writer of burlesque; and the nature he is to imitate is human nature, as viewed in the ordinary scenes of civilized society.

 

5.2.1.1 The human contradiction.

In dealing with man as a social being, all great comic artists have known that they are in the presence of a contradiction: that behind the social being lurks an animal being, whose behaviour often accords very ill with the canons dictated by society. Comedy, from its ritual beginnings, has celebrated creative energy. The primitive revels out of which comedy arose frankly acknowledged man's animal nature; the animal masquerades and the phallic processions are the obvious witnesses to it. Comedy testifies to man's physical vitality, his delight in life, his will to go on living. Comedy is at its merriest, its most festive, when this rhythm of life can be affirmed within the civilized context of human society. In the absence of this sort of harmony between creatural instincts and the dictates of civilization, sundry strains and discontents arise, all baring witness to the contradictory nature of man, which in the comic view is a radical dualism; his efforts to follow the way of rational sobriety are forever being interrupted by the infirmities of the flesh. The duality that tragedy views as a fatal contradiction in the nature of things comedy views as one more instance of the incongruous reality that every man must live with as best he can. "Wherever there is life, there is contradiction," says S©ªren Kierkegaard, the 19th-century Danish Existentialist, in the Concluding Unscientific Postscript(1846), "and wherever there is contradiction, the comical is present." He went on to say that the tragic and the comic are both based on contradiction; but "the tragic is the suffering contradiction, comical, painless contradiction." Comedy makes the contradiction manifest along with a way out, which is why the contradiction is painless. Tragedy, on the other hand, despairs of a way out of the contradiction.

The incongruous is "the essence of the laughable," said the English essayist William Hazlitt, who also declared, in his essay "On Wit and Humour" in English Comic Writers(1819), that "Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps; for he is the only animal that is struck with the difference between what things are, and what they ought to be."

 

5.2.1.2 Comedy, satire, and romance.

Comedy's dualistic view of man as an incongruous mixture of bodily instinct and rational intellect is an essentially ironic view--implying the capacity to see things in a double aspect. The comic drama takes on the features of satire as it fixes on professions of virtue and the practices that contradict them. Satire assumes standards against which professions and practices are judged. To the extent that the professions prove hollow and the practices vicious, the ironic perception darkens and deepens. The element of the incongruous points in the direction of the grotesque, which implies an admixture of elements that do not match. The ironic gaze eventually penetrates to a vision of the grotesque quality of experience, marked by the discontinuity of word and deed and the total lack of coherence between appearance and reality. This suggests one of the extreme limits of comedy, the satiric extreme, in which the sense of the discrepancy between things as they are and things as they might be or ought to be has reached to the borders of tragedy. For the tragic apprehension, as Kierkegaard states, despairs of a way out of the contradictions that life presents.

As satire may be said to govern the movement of comedy in one direction, romance governs its movement in the other. Satiric comedy dramatizes the discrepancy between the ideal and the reality and condemns the pretensions that would mask reality's hollowness and viciousness. Romantic comedy also regularly presents the conflict between the ideal shape of things as hero or heroine could wish them to be and the hard realities with which they are confronted, but typically it ends by invoking the ideal, despite whatever difficulties reality has put in its way. This is never managed without a good deal of contrivance, and the plot of the typical romantic comedy is a medley of clever scheming, calculated coincidence, and wondrous discovery, all of which contribute ultimately to making the events answer precisely to the hero's or heroine's wishes. Plotting of this sort has had a long stage tradition and not exclusively in comedy. It is first encountered in the tragicomedies of the ancient Greek dramatist Euripides (e.g., Alcestis, Iphigeneia in Tauris, Ion, Helen). Shakespeare explored the full range of dramatic possibilities of the romantic mode of comedy. The means by which the happy ending is accomplished in romantic comedy--the document or the bodily mark that establishes identities to the satisfaction of all the characters of goodwill--are part of the stock-in-trade of all comic dramatists, even such 20th-century playwrights as Jean Anouilh (in Le Voyageur sans bagage) and T.S. Eliot (in The Confidential Clerk).

There is nothing necessarily inconsistent in the use of a calculatedly artificial dramatic design to convey a serious dramatic statement. The contrived artifice of Shakespeare's mature comic plots is the perfect foil against which the reality of the characters' feelings and attitudes assumes the greater naturalness. The strange coincidences, remarkable discoveries, and wonderful reunions are unimportant compared with the emotions of relief and awe that they inspire. Their function, as Shakespeare uses them, is precisely to give rise to such emotions, and the emotions, thanks to the plangent poetry in which they are expressed, end by transcending the circumstances that occasioned them. But when such artifices are employed simply for the purpose of eliminating the obstacles to a happy ending--as is the case in the sentimental comedy of the 18th and early 19th centuries--then they stand forth as imaginatively impoverished dramatic clichés. The dramatists of sentimental comedy were committed to writing exemplary plays, wherein virtue would be rewarded and vice frustrated. If hero and heroine were to be rescued from the distresses that had encompassed them, any measures were apparently acceptable; the important thing was that the play's action should reach an edifying end. It is but a short step from comedy of this sort to the melodrama that flourished in the 19th-century theatre. The distresses that the hero and heroine suffer are, in melodrama, raised to a more than comic urgency, but the means of deliverance have the familiar comic stamp: the secret at last made known, the long-lost child identified, the hard heart made suddenly capable of pity. Melodrama is a form of fantasy that proceeds according to its own childish and somewhat egoistic logic; hero and heroine are pure, anyone who opposes them is a villain, and the purity that has exposed them to risks must ensure their eventual safety and happiness. What melodrama is to tragedy farce is to comedy, and the element of fantasy is equally prominent in farce and in melodrama. If melodrama provides a fantasy in which the protagonist suffers for his virtues but is eventually rewarded for them, farce provides a fantasy in which the protagonist sets about satisfying his most roguish or wanton, mischievous or destructive, impulses and manages to do so with impunity.

 

5.2.2 THEORIES

The treatise that Aristotle is presumed to have written on comedy is lost. There is, however, a fragmentary treatise on comedy that bears an obvious relation to Aristotle's treatise on tragedy, Poetics, and is generally taken to be either a version of a lost Aristotelian original or an expression of the philosophical tradition to which he belonged. This is the Tractatus Coislinianuspreserved in a 10th-century manuscript in the De Coislin Collection in Paris. The Tractatus divides the substance of comedy into the same six elements that are discussed in regard to tragedy in the Poetics: plot, character, thought, diction, melody, and spectacle. The characters of comedy, according to the Tractatus, are of three kinds: the impostors, the self-deprecators, and the buffoons. The Aristotelian tradition from which the Tractatus derives probably provided a fourth, the churl, or boor. The list of comic characters in the Tractatus is closely related to a passage in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethicsin which the boaster (the person who says more than the truth) is compared with the mock-modest man (the person who says less), and the buffoon (who has too much wit) is contrasted with the boor (who has too little). (see also  literary criticism, aesthetics)

 

5.2.2.1 Comedy as a rite.

The Tractatus was not printed until 1839, and its influence on comic theory is thus of relatively modern date. It is frequently cited in the studies that attempt to combine literary criticism and anthropology, in the manner in which Sir James George Frazer combined studies of primitive religion and culture in The Golden Bough(1890-1915). In such works, comedy and tragedy alike are traced to a prehistoric death-and-resurrection ceremonial, a seasonal pantomime in which the old year, in the guise of an aged king (or hero or god), is killed, and the new spirit of fertility, the resurrection or initiation of the young king, is brought in. This rite typically featured a ritual combat, or agon, between the representatives of the old and the new seasons, a feast in which the sacrificial body of the slain king was devoured, a marriage between the victorious new king and his chosen bride, and a final triumphal procession in celebration of the reincarnation or resurrection of the slain god. Implicit in the whole ceremony is the ancient rite of purging the tribe through the expulsion of a scapegoat, who carries away the accumulated sins of the past year. Frazer, speaking of scapegoats in The Golden Bough, noted that this expulsion of devils was commonly preceded or followed by a period of general license, an abandonment of the ordinary restraints of society during which all offenses except the gravest go unpunished. This quality of Saturnalia is characteristic of comedy from ancient Greece through medieval Europe. (see also  primitive art, feast)

The seasonal rites that celebrate the yearly cycle of birth, death, and rebirth are seen by the contemporary Canadian critic Northrop Frye as the basis for the generic plots of comedy, romance, tragedy, and irony and satire. The four prefigure the fate of a hero and the society he brings into being. In comedy (representing the season of spring), the hero appears in a society controlled by obstructing characters and succeeds in wresting it from their grasp. The movement of comedy of this sort typically replaces falsehood with truth, illusion with reality. The hero, having come into possession of his new society, sets forth upon adventures, and these are the province of romance (summer). Tragedy (autumn) commemorates the hero's passion and death. Irony and satire (winter) depict a world from which the hero has disappeared, a vision of "unidealized existence." With spring, the hero is born anew.

 

5.2.2.2 The moral force of comedy.

The characters of comedy specified in the Tractatus arrange themselves in a familiar pattern: a clever hero is surrounded by fools of sundry varieties (impostors, buffoons, boors). The hero is something of a trickster; he dissimulates his own powers, while exploiting the weaknesses of those around him. The comic pattern is a persistent one; it appears not only in ancient Greek comedy but also in the farces of ancient Italy, in the commedia dell'arte that came into being in 16th-century Italy, and even in the routines involving a comedian and his straight man in the nightclub acts and the television variety shows of the present time. Implicit here is the tendency to make folly ridiculous, to laugh it out of countenance, which has always been a prominent feature of comedy. (see also  Italian literature)

Renaissance critics, elaborating on the brief and cryptic account of comedy in Aristotle's Poetics, stressed the derisive force of comedy as an adjunct to morality. The Italian scholar Gian Giorgio Trissino's account of comedy in his Poetica, apparently written in the 1530s, is typical: as tragedy teaches by means of pity and fear, comedy teaches by deriding things that are vile. Attention is directed here, as in other critical treatises of this kind, to the source of laughter. According to Trissino, laughter is aroused by objects that are in some way ugly and especially by that from which better qualities were hoped. His statement suggests the relation of the comic to the incongruous. Trissino was as aware as the French poet Charles Baudelaire was three centuries later that laughter betokens the fallen nature of man (Baudelaire would term it man's Satanic nature). Man laughs, says Trissino (echoing Plato's dialogue Philebus), because he is envious and malicious and never delights in the good of others except when he hopes for some good from it for himself. (see also  Renaissance art)

The most important English Renaissance statement concerning comedy is that of Sir Philip Sidney in The Defence of Poesie(1595):

comedy is an imitation of the common errors of our life, which [the comic dramatist] representeth in the most ridiculous and scornful sort that may be, so as it is impossible that any beholder can be content to be such a one.

Like Trissino, Sidney notes that, while laughter comes from delight, not all objects of delight cause laughter, and he demonstrates the distinction as Trissino had done: "we are ravished with delight to see a fair woman, and yet are far from being moved to laughter. We laugh at deformed creatures, wherein certainly we cannot delight." The element of the incongruous is prominent in Sidney's account of scornful laughter. He cites the image of the hero of Greek legend Heracles, with his great beard and furious countenance, in woman's attire, spinning at the command of his beloved queen, Omphale, and declares that this arouses both delight and laughter.

 

5.2.2.3 Comedy and character.

Another English poet, John Dryden, in Of Dramatick Poesie, an Essay(1668), makes the same point in describing the kind of laughter produced by the ancient Greek comedy The Cloudsby Aristophanes. In it, the character of Socrates is made ridiculous by acting very unlike the true Socrates; that is, by appearing childish and absurd rather than with the gravity of the true Socrates. Dryden was concerned with analyzing the laughable quality of comedy and with demonstrating the different forms it has taken in different periods of dramatic history. Aristophanic comedy sought its laughable quality not so much in the imitation of a man as in the representation of "some odd conceit which had commonly somewhat of unnatural or obscene in it." In the so-called New Comedy, introduced by Menander late in the 4th century BC, writers sought to express the ethos, or character, as in their tragedies they expressed the pathos, or suffering, of mankind. This distinction goes back to Aristotle, who, in the Rhetoricdistinguished between ethos, a man's natural bent, disposition, or moral character, and pathos, emotion displayed in a given situation. And the Latin rhetorician Quintilian, in the 1st century AD, noted that ethos is akin to comedy and pathos to tragedy. The distinction is important to Renaissance and Neoclassical assumptions concerning the respective subject of comic and tragic representation. In terms of emotion, ethos is viewed as a permanent condition characteristic of the average man and relatively mild in its nature; pathos, on the other hand, is a temporary emotional state, often violent. Comedy thus expresses the characters of men in the ordinary circumstances of everyday life; tragedy expresses the sufferings of a particular man in extraordinary periods of intense emotion.

In dealing with men engaged in normal affairs, the comic dramatists tended to depict the individual in terms of some single but overriding personal trait or habit. They adopted a method based on the physiological concept of the four humours, or bodily fluids (blood, phlegm, choler, melancholy), and the belief that an equal proportion of these constituted health, while an excess or deficiency of any one of them brought disease. Since the humours governed temperament, an irregular distribution of them was considered to result not only in bodily sickness but also in derangements of personality and behaviour, as well. The resultant comedy of humours is distinctly English, as Dryden notes, and particularly identified with the comedies of Ben Jonson.

 

5.2.2.4 The role of wit.

Humour is native to man. Folly need only be observed and imitated by the comic dramatist to give rise to laughter. Observers as early as Quintilian, however, have pointed out that, though folly is laughable in itself, such jests may be improved if the writer adds something of his own; namely, wit. A form of repartee, wit implies both a mental agility and a linguistic grace that is very much a product of conscious art. Quintilian describes wit at some length in his Institutio oratoriait partakes of urbanity, a certain tincture of learning, charm, saltiness, or sharpness, and polish and elegance. In the preface (1671) to An Evening's Love, Dryden distinguishes between the comic talents of Ben Jonson, on the one hand, and of Shakespeare and his contemporary John Fletcher, on the other, by virtue of their excelling, respectively, in humour and wit. Jonson's talent lay in his ability "to make men appear pleasantly ridiculous on the stage"; while Shakespeare and Fletcher excelled in wit, or "the sharpness of conceit," as seen in their repartee. The distinction is noted as well in Of Dramatick Poesie, an Essay, where a comparison is made between the character of Morose in Jonson's play Epicoene, who is characterized by his humour (namely, his inability to abide any noise but the sound of his own voice), and Shakespeare's Falstaff, who, according to Dryden, represents a miscellany of humours and is singular in saying things that are unexpected by the audience. (see also  Falstaff, Sir John)

The distinctions that Hazlitt arrives at, then, in his essay "On Wit and Humour" are very much in the classic tradition of comic criticism: (see also  "English Comic Writers")

Humour is the describing the ludicrous as it is in itself; wit is the exposing it, by comparing or contrasting it with something else. Humour is, as it were, the growth of nature and accident; wit is the product of art and fancy.

The distinctions persist into the most sophisticated treatments of the subject. Sigmund Freud, for example, in Wit and its Relation to the Unconscious (1905), said that wit is made, but humour is found. Laughter, according to Freud, is aroused at actions that appear immoderate and inappropriate, at excessive expenditures of energy: it expresses a pleasurable sense of the superiority felt on such occasions.

 

5.2.2.5 Baudelaire on the grotesque.

The view that laughter comes from superiority is referred to as a commonplace by Baudelaire, who states it in his essay "On the Essence of Laughter" (1855). Laughter, says Baudelaire, is a consequence of man's notion of his own superiority. It is a token both of an infinite misery, in relation to the absolute being of whom man has an inkling, and of infinite grandeur, in relation to the beasts, and results from the perpetual collision of these two infinities. The crucial part of Baudelaire's essay, however, turns on his distinction between the comic and the grotesque. The comic, he says, is an imitation mixed with a certain creative faculty; the grotesque is a creation mixed with a certain imitative faculty--imitative of elements found in nature. Each gives rise to laughter expressive of an idea of superiority--in the comic, the superiority of man over man, and, in the grotesque, the superiority of man over nature. The laughter caused by the grotesque has about it something more profound and primitive, something much closer to the innocent life, than has the laughter caused by the comic in man's behaviour. In France, the great master of the grotesque was the 16th-century author François Rabelais, while some of the plays of Molière, in the next century, best expressed the comic.

 

5.2.2.6 Bergson's and Meredith's theories.

The French philosopher Henri Bergson (1859-1941) analyzed the dialectic of comedy in his essay "Laughter," which deals directly with the spirit of contradiction that is basic both to comedy and to life. Bergson's central concern is with the opposition of the mechanical and the living; stated in its most general terms, his thesis holds that the comic consists of something mechanical encrusted on the living. Bergson traces the implications of this view in the sundry elements of comedy: situations, language, characters. Comedy expresses a lack of adaptability to society; any individual is comic who goes his own way without troubling to get into touch with his fellow beings. The purpose of laughter is to wake him from his dream. Three conditions are essential for the comic: the character must be unsociable, for that is enough to make him ludicrous; the spectator must be insensible to the character's condition, for laughter is incompatible with emotion; and the character must act automatically (Bergson cites the systematic absentmindedness of Don Quixote). The essential difference between comedy and tragedy, says Bergson, invoking a distinction that goes back to that maintained between ethos and pathos, is that tragedy is concerned with individuals and comedy with classes. And the reason that comedy deals with the general is bound up with the corrective aim of laughter: the correction must reach as great a number of persons as possible. To this end, comedy focusses on peculiarities that are not indissolubly bound up with the individuality of a single person.

It is the business of laughter to repress any tendency on the part of the individual to separate himself from society. The comic character would, if left to his own devices, break away from logic (and thus relieve himself from the strain of thinking); give over the effort to adapt and readapt himself to society (and thus slacken in the attention that is due to life); and abandon social convention (and thus relieve himself from the strain of living).

The essay "On the Idea of Comedy and the Uses of the Comic Spirit" (1877), by Bergson's English contemporary George Meredith, is a celebration of the civilizing power of the comic spirit. The mind, he affirms, directs the laughter of comedy, and civilization is founded in common sense, which equips one to hear the comic spirit when it laughs folly out of countenance and to participate in its fellowship.

Both Bergson's and Meredith's essays have been criticized for focussing so exclusively on comedy as a socially corrective force and for limiting the scope of laughter to its derisive power. The charge is more damaging to Meredith's essay than it is to Bergson's. Whatever the limitations of the latter, it nonetheless explores the implications of its own thesis with the utmost thoroughness, and the result is a rigorous analysis of comic causes and effects for which any student of the subject must be grateful. It is with farce that Bergson's remarks on comedy have the greatest connection and on which they seem chiefly to have been founded. It is no accident that most of his examples are drawn from Molière, in whose work the farcical element is strong, and from the farces of Bergson's own contemporary Eugène Labiche. The laughter of comedy is not always derisive, however, as some of Shakespeare's greatest comedies prove; and there are plays, such as Shakespeare's last ones, which are well within an established tradition of comedy but in which laughter hardly sounds at all. These suggest regions of comedy on which Bergson's analysis of the genre sheds hardly any light at all.

 

5.2.2.7 The comic as a failure of self-knowledge.

Aristotle said that comedy deals with the ridiculous, and Plato, in the Philebusdefined the ridiculous as a failure of self-knowledge; such a failure is there shown to be laughable in private individuals (the personages of comedy) but terrible in persons who wield power (the personages of tragedy). In comedy, the failure is often mirrored in a character's efforts to live up to an ideal of self that may be perfectly worthy but the wrong ideal for him. Shakespearean comedy is rich in examples: the King of Navarre and his courtiers, who must be made to realize that nature meant them to be lovers, not academicians, in Love's Labour's LostBeatrice and Benedick, who must be made to know that nature meant them for each other, not for the single life, in Much Ado About Nothingthe Duke Orsino in Twelfth Nightwho is brought to see that it is not Lady Olivia whom he loves but the disguised Viola, and Lady Olivia herself, who, when the right man comes along, decides that she will not dedicate herself to seven years of mourning for a dead brother, after all; and Angelo in Measure for Measurewhose image of himself collapses when his lust for Isabella makes it clear that he is not the ascetic type. The movement of all these plays follows a familiar comic pattern, wherein characters are brought from a condition of affected folly amounting to self-delusion to a plain recognition of who they are and what they want. For the five years or so after he wrote Measure for Measure, in 1604, Shakespeare seems to have addressed himself exclusively to tragedy, and each play in the sequence of masterpieces he produced during this period--Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra, and Coriolanus--turns in some measure on a failure of self-knowledge. This is notably so in the case of Lear, which is the tragedy of a man who (in the words of one of his daughters) "hath ever but slenderly known himself," and whose fault (as the Fool suggests) is to have grown old before he grew wise. (see also  "King Lear," )

The plots of Shakespeare's last plays (Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter's Tale, The Tempest) all contain a potential tragedy but one that is resolved by nontragic means. They contain, as well, an element of romance of the kind purveyed from Greek New Comedy through the plays of the ancient Roman comic dramatists Plautus and Terence. Children lost at birth are miraculously restored, years later, to their parents, thereby providing occasion for a recognition scene that functions as the denouement of the plot. Characters find themselves--they come to know themselves--in all manner of ways by the ends of these plays. Tragic errors have been made, tragic losses have been suffered, tragic passions--envy, jealousy, wrath--have seemed to rage unchecked, but the miracle that these plays celebrate lies in the discovery that the errors can be forgiven, the losses restored, and the passions mastered by man's godly spirit of reason. The near tragedies experienced by the characters result in the ultimate health and enlightenment of the soul. What is learned is of a profound simplicity: the need for patience under adversity, the need to repent of one's sins, the need to forgive the sins of others. In comedy of this high and sublime sort, patience, repentance, and forgiveness are opposed to the viciously circular pattern of crime, which begets vengeance, which begets more crime. Comedy of this sort deals in regeneration and rebirth. There is always about it something of the religious, as humankind is absolved of its guilt and reconciled one to another and to whatever powers that be.

 

5.2.2.8 Divine comedies in the West and East.

The 4th-century Latin grammarian Donatus distinguished comedy from tragedy by the simplest terms: comedies begin in trouble and end in peace, while tragedies begin in calms and end in tempest. Such a differentiation of the two genres may be simplistic, but it provided sufficient grounds for Dante to call his great poem La Commedia (The Comedy; later called The Divine Comedy), since, as he says in his dedicatory letter, it begins amid the horrors of hell but ends amid the pleasures of heaven. This suggests the movement of Shakespeare's last plays, which begin amid the distresses of the world and end in a supernal peace. Comedy conceived in this sublime and serene mode is rare but recurrent in the history of the theatre. The Spanish dramatist Calderón's Vida es sueño (1635; "Life Is a Dream") is an example; so, on the operatic stage, is Mozart's Magic Flute (1791), in spirit and form so like Shakespeare's Tempest, to which it has often been compared. In later drama, Henrik Ibsen's Little Eyolf (1894) and August Strindberg's To Damascus (1898-1904)--both of which are among the late works of these Scandinavian dramatists--have affinities with this type, and this is the comic mode in which T.S. Eliot's last play, The Elder Statesman (1958), is conceived. It may represent the most universal mode of comedy. The American philosopher Susanne K. Langer writes: (see also  "Magic Flute, The," )

In Asia the designation "Divine Comedy" would fit numberless plays; especially in India triumphant gods, divine lovers united after various trials [as in the perennially popular romance of Rama and Sita], are the favourite themes of a theater that knows no "tragic rhythm." The classical Sanskrit drama was heroic comedy--high poetry, noble action, themes almost always taken from the myths--a serious, religiously conceived drama, yet in the "comic" pattern, which is not a complete organic development reaching a foregone, inevitable conclusion, but is episodic, restoring a lost balance, and implying a new future. The reason for this consistently "comic" image of life in India is obvious enough: both Hindu and Buddhist regard life as an episode in the much longer career of the soul which has to accomplish many incarnations before it reaches its goal, nirvana. Its struggles in the world do not exhaust it; in fact they are scarcely worth recording except in entertainment theater, "comedy" in our sense--satire, farce, and dialogue. The characters whose fortunes are seriously interesting are the eternal gods; and for them there is no death, no limit of potentialities, hence no fate to be fulfilled. There is only the balanced rhythm of sentience and emotion, upholding itself amid the changes of material nature. (From Feeling e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">and Form; Charles Scribner's Sons, 1953.) (see also  Indian literature, Sanskrit literature, heroic poetry, Hinduism)

 

5.2.3 KINDS OF COMEDY IN DIVERSE HISTORICAL PERIODS

 

5.2.3.1 Old and New Comedy in ancient Greece.

The 11 surviving plays of Aristophanes represent the earliest extant body of comic drama; what is known of Greek Old Comedy is derived from these plays, the earliest of which, The Acharnianswas produced in 425 BC. Aristophanic comedy has a distinct formal design but displays very little plot in any conventional sense. Rather, it presents a series of episodes aimed at illustrating, in humorous and often bawdy detail, the implications of a deadly serious political issue: it is a blend of invective, buffoonery, and song and dance. Old Comedy often used derision and scurrility, and this may have proved its undoing; though praised by all, the freedom it enjoyed degenerated into license and violence and had to be checked by law.

In New Comedy, which began to prevail around 336 BC, the Aristophanic depiction of public personages and events was replaced by a representation of the private affairs (usually amorous) of imaginary men and women. New Comedy is known only from the fragments that have survived of the plays of Menander (c. 342-c. 292 BC) and from plays written in imitation of the form by the Romans Plautus (c. 254-184 BC) and Terence (195 or 185-159 BC). A number of the stock comic characters survived from Old Comedy into New: an old man, a young man, an old woman, a young woman, a learned doctor or pedant, a cook, a parasite, a swaggering soldier, a comic slave. New Comedy, on the other hand, exhibits a degree of plot articulation never achieved in the Old. The action of New Comedy is usually about plotting; a clever servant, for example, devises ingenious intrigues in order that his young master may win the girl of his choice. There is satire in New Comedy: on a miser who loses his gold from being overcareful of it (the Aulularia of Plautus); on a father who tries so hard to win the girl from his son that he falls into a trap set for him by his wife (Plautus' Casina); and on an overstern father whose son turns out worse than the product of an indulgent parent (in the Adelphiof Terence). But the satiric quality of these plays is bland by comparison with the trenchant ridicule of Old Comedy. The emphasis in New Comic plotting is on the conduct of a love intrigue; the love element per se is often of the slightest, the girl whom the hero wishes to possess sometimes being no more than an offstage presence or, if onstage, a mute. (see also  Roman Republic and Empire)

New Comedy provided the model for European comedy through the 18th century. During the Renaissance, the plays of Plautus and, especially, of Terence were studied for the moral instruction that young men could find in them: lessons on the need to avoid the snares of harlots and the company of braggarts, to govern the deceitful trickery of servants, to behave in a seemly and modest fashion to parents. Classical comedy was brought up to date in the plays of the "Christian Terence," imitations by schoolmasters of the comedies of the Roman dramatist. They added a contemporary flavour to the life portrayed and displayed a somewhat less indulgent attitude to youthful indiscretions than did the Roman comedy. New Comedy provided the basic conventions of plot and characterization for the commedia eruditacomedy performed from written texts--of 16th-century Italy, as in the plays of Machiavelli and Ariosto. Similarly, the stock characters that persisted from Old Comedy into New were taken over into the improvisational commedia dell'arte, becoming such standard masked characters as Pantalone, the Dottore, the vainglorious Capitano, the young lovers, and the servants, or zanni.

 

5.2.3.2 Rise of realistic comedy in 17th-century England.

The early part of the 17th century in England saw the rise of a realistic mode of comedy based on a satiric observation of contemporary manners and mores. It was masterminded by Ben Jonson, and its purpose was didactic. Comedy, said Jonson in Every Man Out of his Humour(1599), quoting the definition that during the Renaissance was attributed to Cicero, is an imitation of life, a glass of custom, an image of truth. Comedy holds the mirror up to nature and reflects things as they are, to the end that society may recognize the extent of its shortcomings and the folly of its ways and set about its improvement. Jonson's greatest plays--Volpone (1606), Epicoene (1609), The Alchemist (1610), Bartholomew Fair (1614)--offer a richly detailed contemporary account of the follies and vices that are always with us. The setting (apart from Volpone) is Jonson's own London, and the characters are the ingenious or the devious or the grotesque products of the human wish to get ahead in the world. The conduct of a Jonsonian comic plot is in the hands of a clever manipulator who is out to make reality conform to his own desires. Sometimes he succeeds, as in the case of the clever young gentleman who gains his uncle's inheritance in Epicoene or the one who gains the rich Puritan widow for his wife in Bartholomew FairIn Volpone and The Alchemist, the schemes eventually fail, but this is the fault of the manipulators, who will never stop when they are ahead, and not at all due to any insight on the part of the victims. The victims are almost embarrassingly eager to be victimized. Each has his ruling passion--his humour--and it serves to set him more or less mechanically in the path that he will undeviatingly pursue, to his own discomfiture. (see also  "Epicoene, or The Silent Woman", "Volpone; or, the Foxe")

English comedy of the later 17th century is cast in the Jonsonian mold. Restoration comedy is always concerned with the same subject--the game of love--but the subject is treated as a critique of fashionable society. Its aim is distinctly satiric, and it is set forth in plots of Jonsonian complexity, where the principal intriguer is the rakish hero, bent on satisfying his sexual needs, outside the bonds of marriage, if possible. In the greatest of these comedies--Sir George Etherege's Man of Mode (1676), for example, or William Wycherley's Country-Wife(1675) or William Congreve's Way of the World(1700)--the premium is on the energy and the grace with which the game is played, and the highest dramatic approval is reserved for those who take the game seriously enough to play it with style but who have the good sense to know when it is played out. The satiric import of Restoration comedy resides in the dramatist's awareness of a familiar incongruity: that between the image of man in his primitive nature and the image of man amid the artificial restraints that society would impose upon him. The satirist in these plays is chiefly concerned with detailing the artful dodges that ladies and gentlemen employ to satisfy nature and to remain within the pale of social decorum. Inevitably, then, hypocrisy is the chief satiric target. The animal nature of man is taken for granted, and so is his social responsibility to keep up appearances; some hypocrisy must follow, and, within limits, society will wink at indiscretions so long as they are discreetly managed. The paradox is typical of those in which the Restoration comic dramatists delight; and the strongly rational and unidealistic ethos of this comedy has its affinities with the naturalistic and skeptical cast of late-17th-century philosophical thought. (see also  manners, comedy of, Restoration literature)

 

5.2.3.3 Sentimental comedy of the 17th and 18th centuries.

The Restoration comic style collapsed around the end of the 17th century, when the satiric vision gave place to a sentimental one. Jeremy Collier's Short view of the Profaneness and Immorality of the English Stagepublished in 1698, signalled the public opposition to the real or fancied improprieties of plays staged during the previous three decades. "The business of plays is to recommend Vertue, and discountenance Vice": so runs the opening sentence of Collier's attack. No Restoration comic dramatist ever conceived of his function in quite these terms. "It is the business of a comic poet to paint the vices and follies of humankind," Congreve had written a few years earlier (in the dedication to The Double-Dealer). Though Congreve may be assumed to imply--in accordance with the time-honoured theory concerning the didactic end of comedy--that the comic dramatist paints the vices and follies of humankind for the purpose of correcting them through ridicule, he is, nonetheless, silent on this point. Collier's assumption that all plays must recommend virtue and discountenance vice has the effect of imposing on comedy the same sort of moral levy that critics such as Thomas Rymer were imposing on tragedy in their demand that it satisfy poetic justice.

At the beginning of the 18th century, there was a blending of the tragic and comic genres that, in one form or another, had been attempted throughout the preceding century. The vogue of tragicomedy may be said to have been launched in England with the publication of John Fletcher's Faithfull Shepheardesse (c. 1608), an imitation of the Pastor fidoby the Italian poet Battista Guarini. In his Compendium of Tragicomic Poetry (1601), Guarini had argued the distinct nature of the genre, maintaining it to be a third poetic kind, different from either the comic or the tragic. Tragicomedy, he wrote, takes from tragedy its great persons but not its great action, its movement of the feelings but not its disturbance of them, its pleasure but not its sadness, its danger but not its death; from comedy it takes laughter that is not excessive, modest amusement, feigned difficulty, and happy reversal. Fletcher adapted this statement in the address "To the Reader" that prefaces The Faithfull Shepheardesse.

The form quickly established itself on the English stage, and, through the force of such examples as Beaumont and Fletcher's Phylaster (1610) and A King and No King (1611) and a long sequence of Fletcher's unaided tragicomedies, it prevailed during the 20 years before the closing of the theatres in 1642. The taste for tragicomedy continued unabated at the Restoration, and its influence was so pervasive that during the closing decades of the century the form began to be seen in plays that were not, at least by authorial designation, tragicomedies. Its effect on tragedy can be seen not only in the tendency, always present on the English stage, to mix scenes of mirth with more solemn matters but also in the practice of providing tragedy with a double ending (a fortunate one for the virtuous, an unfortunate one for the vicious), as in Dryden's Aureng-Zebe (1675) or Congreve's Mourning Bride (1697). The general lines separating the tragic and comic genres began to break down, and that which is high, serious, and capable of arousing pathos could exist in the same play with what is low, ridiculous, and capable of arousing derision. The next step in the process came when Sir Richard Steele, bent on reforming comedy for didactic purposes, produced The Conscious Lovers(1722) and provided the English stage with an occasion when the audience at a comedy could derive its chief pleasure not from laughing but from weeping. It wept in the delight of seeing virtue rewarded and young love come to flower after parental opposition had been overcome. Comedy of the sort inaugurated by The Conscious Lovers continued to represent the affairs of private life, as comedy had always done, but with a seriousness hitherto unknown; and the traditionally low personages of comedy now had a capacity for feeling that bestowed on them a dignity previously reserved for the personages of tragedy. (see also  Augustan Age)

This trend in comedy was part of a wave of egalitarianism that swept through 18th-century political and social thought. It was matched by a corresponding trend in tragedy, which increasingly selected its subjects from the affairs of private men and women in ordinary life, rather than from the doings of the great. The German dramatist Gotthold Lessing wrote that the misfortunes of those whose circumstances most resemble those of the audience must naturally penetrate most deeply into its heart, and his own Minna von Barnhelm(1767) is an example of the new serious comedy. The capacity to feel, to sympathize with, and to be affected by the plight of a fellow human being without regard for his rank in the world's esteem became the measure of one's humanity. It was a bond that united the fraternity of mankind in an aesthetic revolution that preceded the political revolutions of the 18th century. In literature, this had the effect of hastening the movement toward a more realistic representation of reality, whereby the familiar events of common life are treated "seriously and problematically" (in the phrase of the critic Erich Auerbach, who traced the process in his book Mimesis [1946]). The results may be seen in novels such as Samuel Richardson's Pamela and Clarissa and in middle-class tragedies such as George Lillo's The London Merchant (1731) in England; in the comédie larmoyante ("tearful comedy") in France; in Carlo Goldoni's efforts to reform the commedia dell'arte and replace it with a more naturalistic comedy in the Italian theatre; and in the English sentimental comedy, exemplified in its full-blown state by plays such as Hugh Kelly's False Delicacy (1768) and Richard Cumberland's West Indian (1771). Concerning the sentimental comedy it must be noted that it is only in the matter of appropriating for the bourgeoisie a seriousness of tone and a dignity of representational style previously considered the exclusive property of the nobility that the form can be said to stand in any significant relationship to the development of a more realistic mimetic mode than the traditional tragic and comic ones. The plots of sentimental comedy are as contrived as anything in Plautus and Terence (which with their fondness for foundling heroes who turn out to be long-lost sons of rich merchants, they often resemble); and with their delicate feelings and genteel moral atmosphere, comedies of this sort seem as affected in matters of sentiment as Restoration comedy seems in matters of wit.

Oliver Goldsmith, in his "A Comparison Between Laughing and Sentimental Comedy" (1773), noted the extent to which the comedy in the England of his day had departed from its traditional purpose, the excitation of laughter by exhibiting the follies of the lower part of mankind. He questioned whether an exhibition of its follies would not be preferable to a detail of its calamities. In sentimental comedy, Goldsmith continued, the virtues of private life were exhibited, rather than the vices exposed; and the distresses rather than the faults of mankind generated interest in the piece. Characters in these plays were almost always good; if they had faults, the spectator was expected not only to pardon but to applaud them, in consideration of the goodness of their hearts. Thus, according to Goldsmith, folly was commended instead of being ridiculed. Goldsmith concluded by labelling sentimental comedy a "species of bastard tragedy," "a kind of mulish production": a designation that ironically brings to mind Guarini's comparison of tragicomedy in its uniqueness (a product of comedy and tragedy but different from either) to the mule (the offspring of the horse and the ass but itself neither one nor the other). The production of Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer (1773) and of Richard Brinsley Sheridan's Rivals (1775) and The School for Scandal (1777) briefly reintroduced comic gaiety to the English stage; by the end of the decade, Sheridan's dramatic burlesque, The Critic (first performed 1779), had appeared, with its parody of contemporary dramatic fashions, the sentimental included. But this virtually concluded Sheridan's career as a dramatist; Goldsmith had died in 1774; and the sentimental play was to continue to govern the English comic stage for over a century to come.

 

5.2.3.4 The comic outside the theatre.

The great comic voices of the 18th century in England were not those in the theatre. No dramatic satire of the period can exhibit anything comparable to the furious ridicule of man's triviality and viciousness that Jonathan Swift provided in Gulliver's Travels (1726). His Modest Proposal(1729) is a masterpiece of comic incongruity, with its suave blend of rational deliberation and savage conclusion. The comic artistry of Alexander Pope is equally impressive. Pope expressed his genius in the invective of his satiric portraits and in the range of moral and imaginative vision that was capable, at one end of his poetic scale, of conducting that most elegant of drawing-room epics, The Rape of the Lock(1712-14), to its sublimely inane conclusion and, at the other, of invoking from the scene that closes The Dunciad(1728) an apocalyptic judgment telling what will happen when the vulgarizers of the word have carried the day.

When the voice of comedy did sound on the 18th-century English stage with anything approaching its full critical and satiric resonance, the officials soon silenced it. John Gay's Beggar's Opera(1728) combined hilarity with a satiric fierceness worthy of Swift (who may have suggested the original idea for it). The officials tolerated its spectacularly successful run, but no license from the lord chamberlain could be secured for Gay's sequel, Polly, which was not staged until 1777. The Licensing Act of 1737 ended the theatrical career of Henry Fielding, whose comedies had come under constant fire from the authorities for their satire on the government. Fielding's comic talents were perforce directed to the novel, the form in which he parodied the sentiment and the morality of Richardson's Pamela--in his Shamela and Joseph Andrews (1742)--as brilliantly as he had earlier burlesqued the rant of heroic tragedy in Tom Thumb (1730). (see also  censorship)

Comedy of the sort that ridicules the follies and vices of society to the end of laughing them out of countenance entered the English novel with Fielding. His statement in Joseph Andrews concerning the function of satire is squarely in the Neoclassic tradition of comedy as a corrective of manners and mores: the satirist holds

the glass to thousands in their closets, that they may contemplate their deformity, and endeavour to reduce it, and thus by suffering private mortification may avoid public shame.

Fielding's scenes of contemporary life display the same power of social criticism as that which distinguishes the engravings of his great fellow artist William Hogarth, whose "Marriage à la Mode" (1745) depicts the vacuity and the casual wantonness of the fashionable world that Fielding treats of in the final books of Tom Jones. Hogarth's other series, such as "A Rake's Progress" (1735) or "A Harlot's Progress" (1732), also make a didactic point about the wages of sin, using realistic details heightened with grotesquerie to expose human frailty and its sinister consequences. The grotesque is a recurrent feature of the satiric tradition in England, where comedy serves social criticism. Artists such as Hogarth and Thomas Rowlandson worked in the tradition of Jonson and the Restoration dramatists in the preceding century.

The novel, with its larger scope for varied characters, scenes, and incidents, rather than the drama, afforded the 19th-century artist in comedy a literary form adequate to his role as social critic. The spectacle of man and his society is regularly presented by the 19th-century novelist in comedic terms, as in Vanity Fair (1848), by William Makepeace Thackeray or the Comédie humaine (1842-55) of Honoré de Balzac, and with the novels of Jane Austen, Anthony Trollope, Charles Dickens, and George Meredith.

 

5.2.3.5 20th-century tragicomedy.

The best that the comic stage had to offer in the late 19th century lay in the domain of farce. The masters of this form were French, but it flourished in England as well; what the farces of Eugène Labiche and Georges Feydeau and the operettas of Jacques Offenbach were to the Parisian stage the farces of W.S. Gilbert and the young Arthur Wing Pinero and the operettas that Gilbert wrote in collaboration with Arthur Sullivan were to the London stage. As concerns comedy, the situation in England improved at the end of the century, when Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw turned their talents to it. Wilde's Importance of Being Earnest(1895) is farce raised to the level of high comic burlesque. Shaw's choice of the comic form was inevitable, given his determination that the contemporary English stage should deal seriously and responsibly with the issues that were of crucial importance to contemporary English life. Serious subjects could not be resolved by means of the dramatic clichés of Victorian melodrama. Rather, the prevailing stereotypes concerning the nature of honour, courage, wisdom, and virtue were to be subjected to a hail of paradox, to the end of making evident their inner emptiness or the contradictions they concealed.

Shaw dealt with what, in the preface to Major Barbara(1905), he called "the tragi-comic irony of the conflict between real life and the romantic imagination," and his use of the word tragicomic is a sign of the times. The striking feature of modern art, according to the German novelist Thomas Mann, was that it had ceased to recognize the categories of tragic and comic or the dramatic classifications of tragedy and comedy but saw life as tragicomedy. The sense that tragicomedy is the only adequate dramatic form for projecting the unreconciled ironies of modern life mounted through the closing decades of the 19th century. Ibsen had termed The Wild Duck(published 1884) a tragicomedy; it was an appropriate designation for this bitter play about a young man blissfully ignorant of the lies on which he and his family have built their happy life until an outsider who is committed to an ideal of absolute truth exposes all their guilty secrets with disastrous results. The plays of the Russian writer Anton Chekhov, with their touching and often quite humorous figures leading lives of quiet desperation, reflect precisely that mixture of inarticulate joy and dull pain that is the essence of the tragicomic view of life.

A dramatist such as August Strindberg produces a kind of tragicomedy peculiarly his own, one that takes the form of bourgeois tragedy; it lacerates its principals until they become a parody of themselves. Strindberg's Dance of Death (1901), with its cruelty and pain dispensed with robust pleasure by a fiercely battling husband and wife, is a significant model of the grotesque in the modern theatre; it is reflected in such mid-20th-century examples of what came to be called black comedy as Eugène Ionesco's Victims of Duty (1953) and Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962). Almost equally influential as a turn-of-the-century master of the grotesque is Frank Wedekind, whose Earth Spirit(1895) and its sequel, Pandora's Box(written 1892-1901), though both are termed tragedies by their author, are as much burlesques of tragedy as The Dance of Death. Their grotesquerie consists chiefly in their disturbing combination of innocence and depravity, of farce and horror, of passionate fervour issuing in ludicrous incident that turns deadly. Wedekind's celebration of primitive sexuality and the varied ways in which it manifests itself in an oversophisticated civilization distorts the tragic form to achieve its own grotesque beauty and power.

The great artist of the grotesque and of tragicomedy in the 20th century is the Italian Luigi Pirandello. His drama is explicitly addressed to the contradictoriness of experience: appearances collide and cancel out each other; the quest of the absolute issues in a mind-reeling relativism; infinite spiritual yearnings are brought up hard against finite physical limits; rational purpose is undermined by irrational impulse; and with the longing for permanence in the midst of change comes the ironic awareness that changelessness means death. Stated thus, Pirandello's themes sound almost forbiddingly intellectual, but one of his aims was to convert intellect into passion. Pirandello's characters suffer from intellectual dilemmas that give rise to mental and emotional distress of the most anguished kind, but their sufferings are placed in a satiric frame. The incongruities that the characters are furiously seeking to reconcile attest to the comic aspect of this drama, but there is nothing in it of the traditional movement of comedy, from a state of illusion into the full light of reality. Pirandello's characters dwell amid ambiguities and equivocations that those who are wise in the tragicomic nature of life will accept without close inquiry. The logic of comedy implies that illusions exist to be dispelled; once they are dispelled, everyone will be better off. The logic of Pirandello's tragicomedy demonstrates that illusions make life bearable; to destroy them is to destroy the basis for any possible happiness.

 

5.2.3.6 The absurd.

In their highly individual ways, both Samuel Beckett and Ionesco have employed the forms of comedy--from tragicomedy to farce--to convey the vision of an exhausted civilization and a chaotic world. The very endurance of life amid the grotesque circumstances that obtain in Beckett's plays is at once a tribute to the human power of carrying on to the end and an ironic reflection on the absurdity of doing so. Beckett's plays close in an uneasy silence that is the more disquieting because of the uncertainty as to just what it conceals: whether it masks sinister forces ready to spring or is the expression of a universal indifference or issues out of nothing at all. (see also  Absurd, Theatre of the)

Silence seldom reigns in the theatre of Ionesco, which rings with voices raised in a usually mindless clamour. Some of Ionesco's most telling comic effects have come from his use of dialogue overflowing with clichés and non sequiturs, which make it clear that the characters do not have their minds on what they are saying and, indeed, do not have their minds on anything at all. What they say is often at grotesque variance with what they do. Beneath the moral platitudes lurks violence, which is never far from the surface in Ionesco's plays, and the violence tells what happens to societies in which words and deeds have become fatally disjunct. Ionesco's comic sense is evident as well in his depiction of human beings as automata, their movements decreed by forces they have never questioned or sought to understand. There is something undeniably farcical in Ionesco's spectacles of human regimentation, of men and women at the mercy of things (e.g., the stage full of chairs in The Chairsor the growing corpse in Amédée); the comic quality here is one that Bergson would have appreciated. But the comic in Ionesco's most serious work, as in so much of the contemporary theatre, has ominous implications that give to it a distinctly grotesque aspect. In Ionesco's Victims of Duty and The Killer (1959), as in the works of his Swiss counterparts--Der Besuch der alten Dame (performed 1956; The Visit, 1958) and The Physicists (1962), by Friedrich Dürrenmatt, and The Firebugs (1958), by Max Frisch--the grotesquerie of the tragicomic vision delineates a world in which the humane virtues are dying, and casual violence is the order of the day.

The radical reassessment of the human image that the 20th century has witnessed is reflected in the novel as well as in drama. Previous assumptions about the rational and divine aspects of man have been increasingly called into question by the evidences of man's irrationality, his sheer animality. These are qualities of human nature that writers of previous ages (Swift, for example) have always recognized, but hitherto they have been typically viewed as dark possibilities that could overtake humanity if the rule of reason did not prevail. It is only in the mid-20th century that the savage and the irrational have come to be viewed as part of the normative condition of humanity rather than as tragic aberrations from it. The savage and the irrational amount to grotesque parodies of human possibility, ideally conceived. Thus it is that 20th-century novelists as well as dramatists have recognized the tragicomic nature of the contemporary human image and predicament, and the principal mode of representing both is the grotesque. This may take various forms: the apocalyptic nightmare of tyranny and terror in Kafka's novels The Trial(1925) and The Castle(1926); the tragic farce in terms of which the Austrian novelist Robert Musil describes the slow collapse of a society into anarchy and chaos, in The Man Without Qualities(1930-43); the brilliant irony whereby Thomas Mann represents the hero as a confidence man in The Confessions of Felix Krull (1954); the grimly parodic account of Germany's descent into madness in Günter Grass's novel The Tin Drum (1959). The English novel contains a rich vein of the comic grotesque that extends at least back to Dickens and Thackeray and persisted in the 20th century in such varied novels as Evelyn Waugh's Decline and Fall (1928), Angus Wilson's Anglo-Saxon Attitudes (1956), and Kingsley Amis' Lucky Jim (1954). What novelists such as these have in common is the often disturbing combination of hilarity and desperation. It has its parallel in a number of American novels--John Barth's Giles Goat-Boy (1966), Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.'s Slaughterhouse Five (1969)--in which shrill farce is the medium for grim satire. And the grotesque is a prominent feature of modern poetry, as in some of the "Songs and Other Musical Pieces" of W.H. Auden. (see also  "Confessions of Felix Krull, Confidence Man, The," )

 

5.2.4 THE COMIC IN OTHER ARTS

 

5.2.4.1 The visual arts.


"Peasant Dance," oil on wood by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, c. 1568; in the Kunsthistorisches. . .
SuperStock

The increasing use of the affairs of common life as the subject matter of dramatic comedy through the Middle Ages and the Renaissance is also seen in painting of that time. Scenes from medieval mystery cycles, such as the comic episodes involving Noah's stubborn wife, have counterparts in medieval pictures in the glimpses of everyday realities that are caught through the windows or down the road from the sites where the great spiritual mysteries are in progress: the angel Gabriel may appear to the Virgin in the foreground, while a man is chopping wood in the yard outside. Medieval artists had never neglected the labours and the pleasures of the mundane world, but the treatment of them is often literally marginal, as in the depiction of men and women at work or play in the ornamental borders of an illuminated manuscript page. The seasonal round of life, with its cycle of plowing, sowing, mowing, and reaping interspersed with hawking, hunting, feasts, and weddings (the cycle of life, indeed, which comedy itself celebrates), is depicted in series after series of exquisite miniatures, such as those in the Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry. By the mid-16th century, however, in Pieter Bruegel's famous painting "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus," mundane reality has taken over the foreground; the plowman tills the soil, and the shepherd attends his flock, while, unnoticed by both, the legs of Icarus disappear inconspicuously into the sea. Bruegel is not a comic artist, but his art bears witness to what all great comic art celebrates: the basic rhythm of life. "Peasant Wedding" and "Peasant Dance" (see photograph) endow their heavy men and women with an awkward grace and dignity that bear comparison with Shakespeare's treatment of his comic characters. Paintings like Bruegel's "Children's Games" and his "Fight Between Carnival and Lent" are joyous representations of human energy. The series of "The Labours of the Months"--"Hunters in the Snow" for January, "Haymaking" for July, "Harvesters" for August, "Return of the Herd" for November--give pictorial treatment to a favourite subject of the medieval miniaturists. Finally, allusion must be made to Bruegel's mastery of the grotesque, notably in "The Triumph of Death" and in the "Dulle Griet," in which demons swarm over a devastated landscape.

It is through the art of caricature that the spirit of comedy enters most directly into painting. The style derives from the portraits with ludicrously exaggerated features made by the Carracci, an Italian family of artists, early in the 17th century (Italian caricare, "to overload"). In defiance of the theory of ideal beauty, these portraits emphasized the features that made one man different from another. This method of character portrayal--the singling out of one distinctive feature and emphasizing it over all others--is not unlike the practice of characterizing the personages of the comic stage by means of some predominant humour, which Ben Jonson was developing at about the same time in the London theatre. The use of exaggeration for comic effect was as evident to painters as it was to dramatists. Its usefulness as a means of social and political satire is fully recognized by Hogarth. Hogarth's counterpart in mid-19th-century Paris was Honoré Daumier. His caricatures portray a human comedy as richly detailed and as shrewdly observed as the one portrayed in fiction by his contemporary Balzac. But Daumier's sense of the comic goes beyond caricature; his numerous treatments of scenes from Molière's plays and, most notably, his drawings and canvases of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza attest to the pathos that can lie beneath the comic mask. (see also  Carracci family)

Modern art has abstracted elements of comedy to aid it in the representation of a reality in which the mechanical is threatening to win out over the human. Bergson's contention that the essence of comedy consists of something mechanical encrusted on the living may be said to have achieved a grotesque apotheosis in the French Dadaist Marcel Duchamp's painting "Bride" (1912), in which the female figure has been reduced to an elaborate piece of plumbing. The highly individual Swiss Expressionist Paul Klee's pen-and-ink drawing tinted with watercolour and titled "Twittering Machine" (1922) represents an ingenious device for imitating the sound of birds. The delicacy of the drawing contrasts with the sinister implications of the mechanism, which, innocent though it may appear at first glance, is almost certainly a trap.

The grotesque is a constant stylistic feature of the artist's representation of reality in its brutalized or mechanized aspects. The carnival masks worn by the figures in the painting "Intrigue" (1890), by the Belgian James Ensor, make manifest the depravity and the obscenity that lurk beneath the surface of conventional appearances; Ensor's paintings make much the same point about the persistence of the primitive and the savage into modern life as Wedekind's plays were to do a few years later. German artists after World War I invoked the grotesque with particular power, depicting the inhuman forces that bear upon the individual, as in George Grosz's savage cartoon titled "Germany, a Winter's Tale" (1918), in which the puppet-like average citizen sits at table surrounded by militarist, capitalist, fatuous clergyman and all the violent and dissolute forces of a decadent society. The mutilated humanity in Max Beckmann's "Dream" (1921) and "Departure" (1932-33) is a further testament to human viciousness, 20th-century variety.

Rather more explicitly comic is the element of fantasy in modern paintings, in which seemingly unrelated objects are brought together in a fine incongruity, as in the French primitive Henri Rousseau's famous "Dream" (1910), with its nude woman reclining on a red-velvet sofa amid the flora and fauna of a lush and exotic jungle. The disparate figures that float (in defiance of all the laws of gravity) through the paintings of the Russian Surrealist Marc Chagall are individually set forth in a nimbus of memory and in the landscape of dream. But fantasy can take on a grotesquerie of its own, as in some of Chagall's work, such as the painting "I and The Village" (1911).

The purest expression of the comic in modern painting must surely be Henri Matisse's "Joy of Life" (1905-06), a picture that might be taken as a visual expression of the precept that the rhythm of comedy is the basic rhythm of life. But Matisse's painting was not to be the last word on the subject: "Joy of Life" produced, as a counterstatement, Pablo Picasso's "Demoiselles d'Avignon" (1906-07), in which the daughters of joy, in their grim and aggressive physical tension, stand as a cruel parody of the delight in the senses that Matisse's picture celebrates. "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" and such a later Picasso masterpiece as the "Three Dancers" (1925) suggest that, for the visual as well as the literary artist of the 20th century, the joy of life tends to issue in grotesque shapes.

 

5.2.4.2 Music.

Given the wide range of imitative sounds of which musical instruments and the human voice are capable, comic effects are readily available to the composer who wants to use them. At the simplest level, these may amount to nothing more than humorous adjuncts to a larger composition, such as the loud noise with which the 18th-century Austrian composer Joseph Haydn surprises his listeners in Symphony No. 94 or the sound of the ticking clock in No. 101. The scherzo, which Ludwig van Beethoven introduced into symphonic music in the early 19th century, may be said to have incorporated in it a musical joke but one of a highly abstract kind; its nervous jocularity provides a contrast and a commentary (both heavy with irony) on the surrounding splendour. A century after Beethoven, the jocularity grew more desperate and the irony more profound in the grim humour that rises out of the grotesque scherzos of Gustav Mahler. A more sustained and a more explicit musical exposition of comic themes and attitudes comes when a composer draws his inspiration directly from a work of comic literature, as Richard Strauss does in his orchestral variations based on Don Quixote and on the merry pranks of Till Eulenspiegel.

It is, however, opera that provides the fullest form for comedy to express itself in music, and some of the most notable achievements of comic art have been conceived for the operatic stage. High on any list of comic masterpieces must come the four principal operas of Mozart: The Marriage of Figaro (1786), Don Giovanni (1787), Così fan tutte (1790), and The Magic Flute (1791), and there are countless others worthy of mention. Operatic comedy has an advantage over comedy in the spoken theatre in its ability to impose a coherent form on the complexities of feeling and action that are often of the essence in comedy. The complex feeling experienced by different characters must be presented in spoken comedy seriatim; operatic comedy can present them simultaneously. When three or four characters talk simultaneously in the spoken theatre, the result is an incoherent babble. But the voices of three or four or even more characters can be blended together in an operatic ensemble, and, while most of the words may be lost, the vocal lines will serve to identify the individual characters and the general nature of the emotions they are expressing. The complexities of action in the spoken theatre are the chief source of the comic effect, which increases as the confusion mounts; such complexities of action operate to the same comic end in opera but here with the added ingredient of music, which provides an overarching design of great formal coherence. In the music, all is manifestly ordered and harmonious, while the events of the plot appear random and chaotic; the contrast between the movement of the plot and the musical progression provides a Mozart or a Rossini with some of his wittiest and most graceful comic effects. Finally, it should be noted that operatic comedy can probe psychological and emotional depths of character that spoken comedy would scarcely attempt. The Countess in Mozart's Figaro is a very much more moving figure than she is in Beaumarchais' play; the Elvira of Don Giovanniexhibits a fine extravagance that is little more than suggested in Molière's comedy. (see also  "Marriage of Figaro, The," )

 

5.2.4.3 Television and cinema.

When comedy is dependent on the favour of a large part of the public, as reflected in box-office receipts or the purchase of a television sponsor's product, it seldom achieves a high level of art. There is nothing innocent about laughter at the whims and inconsistencies of humankind, and radio and television and film producers have always been wary of offending their audiences with it. On radio and television, the laughter is usually self-directed (as in the performances of comedians such as Jack Benny or Red Skelton), or it is safely contained within the genial confines of a family situation (e.g., the "Fibber McGee and Molly" radio show or "I Love Lucy" on television). Much the same attitude has obtained with regard to comedy in the theatre in the United States. Satire has seldom succeeded on Broadway, which instead has offered pleasant plays about the humorous behaviour of basically nice people, such as the eccentric family in George S. Kaufmann and Moss Hart's You Can't Take It with You (1936) or the lovable head of the household in Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse's Life with Father (1939) or the indefatigable Dolly Levi in Thornton Wilder's Matchmaker (1954) and in her later reincarnation in the musical Hello, Dolly!

The American public has never been quite comfortable in the presence of comedy. The calculated ridicule and the relentless exposure often seem cruel or unfair to a democratic public. If all men are created equal, then it ill becomes anyone to laugh at the follies of his fellows, especially when they are follies that are likely to be shared, given the common background of social opportunity and experience of the general public. There is an insecurity in the mass audience that is not compatible with the high self-assurance of comedy as it judges between the wise and the foolish of the world. The critical spirit of comedy has never been welcome in American literature; in both fiction and drama, humour, not comedy, has raised the laughter. American literature can boast an honorable tradition of humorists, from Mark Twain to James Thurber, but has produced no genuinely comic writer. As American social and moral tenets were subjected to increasing critical scrutiny from the late 1950s onward, however, there were some striking achievements in comedy in various media: Edward Albee's American Dream (1961) and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962), on the stage; novels such as those of Saul Bellow and Joseph Heller's Catch-22 (1961); and films such as Dr. Strangelove (1964). (see also  "Doctor Strangelove, or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb")

This last example is remarkable, because comedy in the medium of film, in America, had been conceived as entertainment and not much more. This is not to say that American film comedies lacked style. The best of them always displayed verve and poise and a thoroughly professional knowledge of how to amuse the public without troubling it. Their shortcoming has always been that the amusement they provide lacks resonance.

If films have seldom explored comedy with great profundity, they have, nonetheless, produced it in great variety. There have been comedies of high sophistication, the work of directors such as Ernst Lubitsch, George Cukor, Frank Capra, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, and Billy Wilder and of actors and actresses such as Greta Garbo (in Lubitsch's Ninotchka, 1939), Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant (in Cukor's Philadelphia Story, 1940), Bette Davis (in Mankiewicz' All About Eve, 1950), Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert (in Capra's It Happened One Night, 1934), Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur (in Capra's Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, 1936), and Marilyn Monroe and Jack Lemmon (in Billy Wilder's Some Like It Hot, 1959). There have been comedies with music, built around the talents of singers and dancers such as Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell and Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire; there are the classic farces of Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton and, later, of W.C. Fields and the Marx Brothers and Laurel and Hardy; and there is a vast, undistinguished field of comedies dealing with the humours of domestic life. The varieties of comedy in Hollywood films have always been replicas of those on the New York stage; as often as not, they were products of the same talents: in the 1930s, of dramatists such as Philip Barry or S.N. Behrman and composers such as Cole Porter, Richard Rodgers, and Irving Berlin; in the 1960s, of the dramatist Neil Simon and the composer Burt Bacharach.

European film makers, with an older and more intellectual tradition of comedy available to them, produced comedies of more considerable stature. Among French directors, Jean Renoir, in his The Rules of the Game(1939), conveyed a moving human drama and a profoundly serious vision of French life on the eve of World War II in a form, deriving from the theatre, that blends the comic and the tragic. His disciple François Truffaut, in Jules and Jim(1961), directed a witty and tender but utterly clear-sighted account of how gaiety and love turn deadly. Though not generally regarded as a comic artist, the Swedish film maker Ingmar Bergman produced a masterpiece of film comedy in Smiles of a Summer Night(1955), a wise, wry account of the indignities that must sometimes be endured by those who have exaggerated notions of their wisdom or virtue. The films of the Italian director and writer Federico Fellini represent a comic vision worthy of Pirandello. La strada(1954), with its Chaplinesque waif (played by Fellini's wife, Giulietta Masina) as central figure, is a disturbing compound of pathos and brutality. Comedy's affirmation of the will to go on living has had no finer portrayal than in Giulietta Masina's performance in the closing scene of Nights of Cabiria(1956). La dolce vita(1960) is a luridly satiric vision of modern decadence, where ideals are travestied by reality, and everything is illusion and disillusionment; the vision is carried to even more bizarre lengths in Fellini's e="mso-bidi-font-style: normal">Satyricon (1969), in which the decadence of the modern world is grotesquely mirrored in the ancient one. 8 e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">1/2 (1963) and Juliet of the Spirits(1965) are Fellini's most brilliantly inventive films, but their technical exuberance is controlled by a profoundly serious comic purpose. The principals in both films are seeking--through the phantasmagoria of their past and present, of their dreams and their delusions, all of which seem hopelessly mixed with their real aspirations--to know themselves. (C.H.Ho.)

 

5.3 Tragedy

Although the word tragedy is often used loosely to describe any sort of disaster or misfortune, it more precisely refers to a work of art, usually a play or novel, that probes with high seriousness questions concerning the role of man in the universe. The Greeks of Attica, the ancient state whose chief city was Athens, first used the word in the 5th century BC to describe a specific kind of play, which was presented at festivals in Greece. Sponsored by the local governments, these plays were attended by the entire community, a small admission fee being provided by the state for those who could not afford it themselves. The atmosphere surrounding the performances was more like that of a religious ceremony than entertainment. There were altars to the gods, with priests in attendance, and the subjects of the tragedies were the misfortunes of the heroes of legend, religious myth, and history. Most of the material was derived from the works of Homer and was common knowledge in the Greek communities. So powerful were the achievements of the three greatest Greek dramatists--Aeschylus (525-456 BC), Sophocles (c. 496-406 BC), and Euripides (c. 480-406 BC)--that the word they first used for their plays survived and came to describe a literary genre that, in spite of many transformations and lapses, has proved its viability through 25 centuries. (see also  Ancient Greek literature, Greek religion)

Historically, tragedy of a high order has been created in only four periods and locales: Attica, in Greece, in the 5th century BC; England in the reigns of Elizabeth I and James I, from 1558 to 1625; 17th-century France; and Europe and America during the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th. Each period saw the development of a special orientation and emphasis, a characteristic style of theatre. In the modern period, roughly from the middle of the 19th century, the idea of tragedy found embodiment in the collateral form of the novel.

This section focusses primarily on the development of tragedy as a literary genre. Further information on the relationship of tragedy to other types of drama will be found in the section above on Dramatic literature . The role of tragedy in the growth of theatre is discussed in THEATRE, THE HISTORY OF WESTERN .

 

5.3.1 DEVELOPMENT

 

5.3.1.1 Origins in Greece.

The questions of how and why tragedy came into being and of the bearing of its origins on its development in subsequent ages and cultures have been investigated by historians, philologists, archaeologists, and anthropologists with results that are suggestive but conjectural. Even the etymology of the world tragedy is far from established. The most generally accepted source is the Greek tragoidia, or "goat-song," from tragos ("goat") and aeidein ("to sing"). The word could have referred either to the prize, a goat, that was awarded to the dramatists whose plays won the earliest competitions or to the dress (goat skins) of the performers, or to the goat that was sacrificed in the primitive rituals from which tragedy developed.

In these communal celebrations, a choric dance may have been the first formal element and perhaps for centuries was the principal element. A speaker was later introduced into the ritual, in all likelihood as an extension of the role of the priest, and dialogue was established between him and the dancers, who became the chorus in the Athenian drama. Aeschylus is usually regarded as the one who, realizing the dramatic possibilities of the dialogue, first added a second speaker and thus invented the form of tragedy. That so sophisticated a form could have been fully developed by a single artist, however, is scarcely credible. Hundreds of early tragedies have been lost, including some by Aeschylus himself. Of some 90 plays attributed to him, only seven have survived.

Four Dionysia, or feasts of the Greek God Dionysus, were held annually in Athens. Since Dionysus once held place as the god of vegetation and the vine, and the goat was believed sacred to him, it has been conjectured that tragedy originated in fertility feasts to commemorate the harvest and the vintage and the associated ideas of the death and renewal of life. The purpose of such rituals is to exercise some influence over these vital forces. Whatever the original religious connections of tragedy may have been, two elements have never entirely been lost: (1) its high seriousness, befitting matters in which survival is at issue and (2) its involvement of the entire community in matters of ultimate and common concern. When either of these elements diminishes, when the form is overmixed with satiric, comic, or sentimental elements, or when the theatre of concern succumbs to the theatre of entertainment, then tragedy falls from its high estate and is on its way to becoming something else. (see also  Great Dionysia, agriculture, fertility cult)

As the Greeks developed it, the tragic form, more than any other, raised questions about man's existence. Why must man suffer? Why must man be forever torn between the seeming irreconcilables of good and evil, freedom and necessity, truth and deceit? Are the causes of his suffering outside himself, in blind chance, in the evil designs of others, in the malice of the gods? Are its causes within him, and does he bring suffering upon himself through arrogance, infatuation, or the tendency to overreach himself? Why is justice so elusive?

 

5.3.1.1.1 Aeschylus: the first great tragedian.

It is this last question that Aeschylus asks most insistently in his two most famous works, the Oresteia(a trilogy comprising Agamemnon, Choephoroi, and Eumenides) and Prometheus Bound (the first part of a trilogy of which the last two parts have been lost): is it right that Orestes, a young man in no way responsible for his situation, should be commanded by a god, in the name of justice, to avenge his father by murdering his mother? Is there no other way out of his dilemma than through the ancient code of blood revenge, which will only compound the dilemma? Again: was it right that in befriending mankind with the gifts of fire and the arts, Prometheus should offend the presiding god Zeus and himself be horribly punished? Aeschylus opened questions whose answers in the Homeric stories had been taken for granted. In Homer, Orestes' patricide is regarded as an act of filial piety, and Prometheus' punishment is merely the inevitable consequence of defying the reigning deity. All of the materials of tragedy, all of its cruelty, loss, and suffering, are present in Homer and the ancient myths but are dealt with as absolutes--self-sufficient and without the questioning spirit that was necessary to raise them to the level of tragedy. It remained for Aeschylus and his fellow tragedians first to treat these "absolutes" critically and creatively in sustained dramatic form. They were true explorers of the human spirit. (see also  Greek mythology, humanism)

In addition to their remarkable probing into the nature of existence, their achievements included a degree of psychological insight for which they are not generally given credit. Though such praise is usually reserved for Shakespeare and the moderns, the Athenian dramatists conveyed a vivid sense of the living reality of their characters' experience: of what it felt like to be caught, like Orestes, in desperately conflicting loyalties or to be subjected, like Prometheus, to prolonged and unjust punishment. The mood of the audience as it witnessed the acting out of these climactic experiences has been described as one of impassioned contemplation. From their myths and epics and from their history in the 6th century, the people of Athens learned that they could extend an empire and lay the foundations of a great culture. From their tragedies of the 5th century, they learned who they were, something of the possibilities and limitations of the spirit, and of what it meant, not merely what it felt like, to be alive in a world both beautiful and terrible.

Aeschylus has been called the most theological of the Greek tragedians. His Prometheus has been compared to the Book of Job of the Bible both in its structure (i.e., the immobilized heroic figure maintaining his cause in dialogues with visitors) and in its preoccupation with the problem of suffering at the hands of a seemingly unjust deity. Aeschylus tended to resolve the dramatic problem into some degree of harmony, as scattered evidence suggests he did in the last two parts of the Promethiad and as he certainly did in the conclusion of the Oresteia. This tendency would conceivably lead him out of the realm of tragedy and into religious assurance. But his harmonies are never complete. In his plays evil is inescapable, loss is irretrievable, suffering is inevitable. What the plays say positively is that man can learn through suffering. The chorus in Agamemnon, the first play of the Oresteia, says this twice. The capacity to learn through suffering is a distinguishing characteristic of the tragic hero, preeminently of the Greek tragic hero. He has not merely courage, tenacity, and endurance but also the ability to grow, by means of these qualities, into an understanding of himself, of his fellows, and of the conditions of existence. Suffering, says Aeschylus, need not be embittering but can be a source of knowledge. The moral force of his plays and those of his fellow tragedians can hardly be exaggerated. They were shaping agents in the Greek notion of education. It has been said that from Homer the Greeks learned how to be good Greeks; from the tragedies they learned an enlarged humanity. If it cannot be proved that Aeschylus "invented" tragedy, it is clear that he at least set its tone and established a model that is still operative. Even in the 20th century, the Oresteia has been acclaimed as the greatest spiritual work of man, and dramatists such as T.S. Eliot, in The Family Reunion(1939), and Jean-Paul Sartre, in The Flies (1943), found modern relevance in its archetypal characters, situations, and themes. (see also  Job, The Book of)

 

5.3.1.1.2 Sophocles

Sophocles' life spanned almost the whole of the 5th century. He is said to have written his last play, Oedipus at Colonus, at the age of 90. Only seven of his plays, of some 125 attributed to him, survive. He won the prize in the tragic competitions 20 times and never placed lower than second.

Sophocles has been called the great mediating figure between Aeschylus and Euripides. Of the three, it might be said that Aeschylus tended to resolve tragic tensions into higher truth, to look beyond, or above, tragedy; that Euripides' irony and bitterness led him the other way to fix on the disintegration of the individual; and that Sophocles, who is often called the "purest" artist of the three, was truest to the actual state of human experience. Unlike the others, Sophocles seems never to insinuate himself into his characters or situations, never to manipulate them into preconceived patterns. He sets them free on a course seemingly of their own choosing. He neither preaches nor rails. If life is hard and often destructive, the question Sophocles asks is not how did this come to be or why did such a misfortune have to happen but rather, given the circumstances, how must a man conduct himself, how should he act, what must he do?

His greatest play, Oedipus the Kingmay serve as a model of his total dramatic achievement. Embodied in it, and suggested with extraordinary dramatic tact, are all the basic questions of tragedy, which are presented in such a way as almost to define the form itself. It is not surprising that Aristotle, a century later, analyzed it for his definition of tragedy in the Poetics. It is the nuclear Greek tragedy, setting the norm in a way that cannot be claimed for any other work, not even the Oresteia.

In Oedipus, as in Sophocles' other plays, the chorus is much less prominent than in Aeschylus' works. The action is swifter and more highly articulated; the dialogue is sharper, more staccato, and bears more of the meaning of the play. Though much has been made of the influence of fate on the action of the play, later critics emphasize the freedom with which Oedipus acts throughout. Even before the action of the play begins, the oracle's prediction that Oedipus was doomed to kill his father and marry his mother had long since come true, though he did not realize it. Though he was fated, he was also free throughout the course of the play--free to make decision after decision, to carry out his freely purposed action to its completion. In him, Sophocles achieved one of the enduring definitions of the tragic hero--that of a man for whom the liberation of the self is a necessity. The action of the play, the purpose of which is to discover the murderer of Oedipus' father and thereby to free the city from its curse, leads inevitably to Oedipus' suffering--the loss of his wife, his kingdom, his sight. The messenger who reports Oedipus' self-blinding might well have summarized the play with "All ills that there are names for, all are here." And the chorus' final summation deepens the note of despair: "Count no man happy," they say in essence, "until he is dead."

But these were not Sophocles' ultimate verdicts. The action is so presented that the final impression is not of human helplessness at the hands of maligning gods nor of man as the pawn of fate. Steering his own course, with great courage, Oedipus has ferreted out the truth of his identity and administered his own punishment, and, in his suffering, learned a new humanity. The final impression of the Oedipus, far from being one of unmixed evil and nihilism, is of massive integrity, powerful will, and magnanimous acceptance of a horribly altered existence.

Some 50 years later, Sophocles wrote a sequel to Oedipus the King. In Oedipus at Colonusthe old Oedipus, further schooled in suffering, is seen during his last day on earth. He is still the same Oedipus in many ways: hot-tempered, hating his enemies, contentious. Though he admits his "pollution" in the murder of his father and the marriage to his mother, he denies that he had sinned, since he had done both deeds unwittingly. Throughout the play, the theme of which has been described as the "heroization" of Oedipus, he grows steadily in nobility and awesomeness. Finally, sensing the approach of the end, he leaves the scene, to be elevated in death to a demigod, as the messenger describes the miraculous event. In such manner Sophocles leads his tragedy toward an ultimate assertion of values. His position has been described as "heroic humanism," as making a statement of belief in the human capacity to transcend evils, within and without, by means of the human condition itself.

Tragedy must maintain a balance between the higher optimisms of religion or philosophy, or any other beliefs that tend to explain away the enigmas and afflictions of existence, on the one hand, and the pessimism that would reject the whole human experiment as valueless and futile on the other. Thus the opposite of tragedy is not comedy but the literature of cynicism and despair, and the opposite of the tragic artist's stance, which is one of compassion and involvement, is that of the detached and cynical ironist. (see also  irony)

 

5.3.1.1.3 Euripides

The tragedies of Euripides test the Sophoclean norm in this direction. His plays present in gruelling detail the wreck of human lives under the stresses that the gods often seem willfully to place upon them. Or, if the gods are not willfully involved through jealousy or spite, they sit idly by while man wrecks himself through passion or heedlessness. No Euripidean hero approaches Oedipus in stature. The margin of freedom is narrower, and the question of justice, so central and absolute an ideal for Aeschylus, becomes a subject for irony. In Hippolytus for example, the goddess Artemis never thinks of justice as she takes revenge on the young Hippolytus for neglecting her worship; she acts solely out of personal spite. In MedeaMedea's revenge on Jason through the slaughter of their children is so hideously unjust as to mock the very question. In the Bacchaewhen the frenzied Agave tears her son, Pentheus, to pieces and marches into town with his head on a pike, the god Dionysus, who had engineered the situation, says merely that Pentheus should not have scorned him. The Euripidean gods, in short, cannot be appealed to in the name of justice. Euripides' tendency toward moral neutrality, his cool tacking between sides (e.g., between Pentheus versus Dionysus and the bacchantes) leave the audience virtually unable to make a moral decision. In Aeschylus' Eumenides (the last play of the Oresteia), the morals of the gods improve. Athena is there, on the stage, helping to solve the problem of justice. In Sophocles, while the gods are distant, their moral governance is not questioned. Oedipus ends as if with a mighty "So be it." In Euripides, the gods are destructive, wreaking their capricious wills on defenseless man. Aristotle called Euripides the most tragic of the three dramatists; surely his depiction of the arena of human life is the grimmest. (see also  "Oresteia")

Many qualities, however, keep his tragedies from becoming literature of protest, of cynicism, or of despair. He reveals profound psychological insight, as in the delineation of such antipodal characters as Jason and Medea, or of the forces, often subconscious, at work in the group frenzy of the Bacchae. His Bacchic odes reveal remarkable lyric power. And he has a deep sense of human values, however external and self-conscious. Medea, even in the fury of her hatred for Jason and her lust for revenge, must steel herself to the murder of her children, realizing the evil of what she is about to do. In this realization, Euripides suggests a saving hope: here is a great nature gone wrong--but still a great nature.

 

5.3.1.1.4 Later Greek drama.

After Euripides, Greek drama reveals little that is significant to the history of tragedy. Performances were given during the remainder of the pre-Christian era in theatres throughout the Mediterranean world, but, with the decline of Athens as a city-state, the tradition of tragedy eroded. As external affairs deteriorated, the high idealism, the exalted sense of human capacities depicted in tragedy at its height yielded more and more to the complaints of the skeptics. The Euripidean assault on the gods ended in the debasement of the original lofty conceptions. A 20th-century British classical scholar, Gilbert Murray, used the phrase "the failure of nerve" to describe the late Greek world. It may, indeed, provide a clue to what happened. On the other hand, according to the 19th-century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, in The Birth of Tragedy (1872), a quite different influence may have spelled the end of Greek tragedy: the so-called Socratic optimism, the notion underlying the dialogues of Plato that man could "know himself" through the exercise of his reason in patient, careful dialectic--a notion that diverted questions of man's existence away from drama and into philosophy. In any case, the balance for tragedy was upset, and the theatre of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides gave way to what seems to have been a theatre of diatribe, spectacle, and entertainment. (see also  "Birth of Tragedy from the Spirit of Music, The," )

 

5.3.1.2 The long hiatus.

The Roman world failed to revive tragedy. Seneca (4 BC-AD 65) wrote at least eight tragedies, mostly adaptations of Greek materials, such as the stories of Oedipus, Hippolytus, and Agamemnon, but with little of the Greek tragic feeling for character and theme. The emphasis is on sensation and rhetoric, tending toward melodrama and bombast. The plays are of interest in this context mainly as the not entirely healthy inspiration for the precursors of Elizabethan tragedy in England. (see also  Latin literature, Senecan tragedy)

The long hiatus in the history of tragedy between the Greeks and the Elizabethans has been variously explained. In the Golden Age of Roman literature, roughly from the birth of Virgil in 70 BC to the death of Ovid in AD 17, the Roman poets followed the example of Greek literature; although they produced great lyric and epic verse, their tragic drama lacked the probing freshness and directness fundamental to tragedy. (see also  Augustan Age)

With the collapse of the Roman world and the invasions of the barbarians came the beginnings of the long, slow development of the Christian Church. Churchmen and philosophers gradually forged a system, based on the Christian revelation, of the nature and destiny of man. The mass, with its daily reenactment of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, its music, and its dramatic structure, may have provided something comparable to tragic drama in the lives of the people. (see also  Middle Ages)

With the coming of the Renaissance, the visual arts more and more came to represent the afflictive aspects of life, and the word tragedy again came into currency. Chaucer (1340-1400) used the word in Troilus and Criseyde, and in The Canterbury Talesit is applied to a series of stories in the medieval style of de casibus virorum illustrium, meaning "the downfalls" (more or less inevitable) "of princes." Chaucer used the word to signify little more than the turn of the wheel of fortune, against whose force no meaningful effort of man is possible. It remained for the Elizabethans to develop a theatre and a dramatic literature that reinstated the term on a level comparable to that of the Greeks. (see also  Middle English literature, Renaissance art)

 

5.3.1.3 Elizabethan.

The long beginning of the Elizabethan popular theatre, like that of the Greek theatre, lay in religious ceremonials, probably in the drama in the liturgy of the two greatest events in the Christian year, Christmas and Easter. In the Early Church, exchanges between two groups of choristers, or between the choir and a solo voice, led to the idea of dialogue, just as it had in the development of Greek tragedy. The parts became increasingly elaborate, and costumes were introduced to individualize the characters. Dramatic gestures and actions were a natural development. More and more of the biblical stories were dramatized, much as the material of Homer was used by the Greek tragedians, although piously in this instance, with none of the tragic skepticism of the Greeks. In the course of generations, the popularity of the performances grew to such an extent that, to accommodate the crowds, they were moved, from inside the church to the porch, or square, in front of the church. The next step was the secularization of the management of the productions, as the towns and cities took them over. Day-long festivals were instituted, involving, as in the Greek theatre, the whole community. Cycles of plays were performed at York, Chester, and other English religious centres, depicting in sequences of short dramatic episodes the whole human story, from the Fall of Lucifer and the Creation to the Day of Doom. Each play was assigned to an appropriate trade guild (the story of Noah and the Ark, for example, went to the shipwrights), which took over complete responsibility for the production. Hundreds of actors and long preparation went into the festivals. These "miracle" and "mystery" plays, however crude they may now seem, dealt with the loftiest of subjects in simple but often powerful eloquence. Although the audience must have been a motley throng, it may well have been as involved and concerned as those of the Greek theatre. (see also  Elizabethan literature, liturgical drama, miracle play)

Once the drama became a part of the secular life of the communities, popular tastes affected its religious orientation. Comic scenes, like those involving Noah's nagging wife, a purely secular creation who does not appear in the Bible, became broader. The "tragic" scenes--anything involving the Devil or Doomsday--became more and more melodramatic. With the Renaissance came the rediscovery of the Greek and Roman cultures and the consequent development of a world view that led away from moral and spiritual absolutes and toward an increasingly skeptical individualism. The high poetic spirits of the mid-16th century began to turn the old medieval forms of the miracles and mysteries to new uses and to look to the ancient plays, particularly the lurid tragedies of Seneca, for their models. A bloody play, Gorboducby Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton, first acted in 1561, is now known as the first formal tragedy in English, though it is far from fulfilling the high offices of the form in tone, characterization, and theme. Thomas Kyd's Spanish Tragedie(c. 1589) continued the Senecan tradition of the "tragedy of blood" with somewhat more sophistication than Gorboduc but even more bloodletting. Elizabethan tragedy never freed itself completely from certain melodramatic aspects of the influence of Seneca.

 

5.3.1.3.1 Marlowe

The first tragedian worthy of the tradition of the Greeks was Christopher Marlowe (1564-93). Of Marlowe's tragedies, Tamburlaine (1587), Doctor Faustus (c. 1588), The Jew of Malta (1589), and Edward II (c. 1593), the first two are the most famous and most significant. In Tamburlaine, the material was highly melodramatic -- Tamburlaine's popular image was that of the most ruthless and bloody of conquerors. In a verse prologue, when Marlowe invites the audience to "View but his [Tamburlaine's] picture in this tragic glass," he had in mind little more, perhaps, than the trappings and tone of tragedy: "the stately tent of war," which is to be his scene, and "the high astounding terms," which will be his rhetoric. But he brought such imaginative vigour and sensitivity to bear that melodrama is transcended, in terms reminiscent of high tragedy. Tamburlaine, a Scythian shepherd of the 14th century, becomes the spokesman, curiously enough, for the new world of the Renaissance--iconoclastic, independent, stridently ambitious. Just as the Greek tragedians challenged tradition, Tamburlaine shouts defiance at all the norms, religious and moral, that Marlowe's generation inherited. But Tamburlaine, although he is an iconoclast, is also a poet. No one before him on the English stage had talked with such magnificent lyric power as he does, whether it be on the glories of conquest or on the beauties of Zenocrate, his beloved. When, still unconquered by any enemy, he sickens and dies, he leaves the feeling that something great, however ruthless, has gone. Here once again is the ambiguity that was so much a part of the Greek tragic imagination -- the combination of awe, pity, and fear that Aristotle defined. (see also  "Tamburlaine the Great")

In Doctor Faustus the sense of conflict between the tradition and the new Renaissance individualism is much greater. The claims of revealed Christianity are presented in the orthodox spirit of the morality and mystery plays, but Faustus' yearnings for power over space and time are also presented with a sympathy that cannot be denied. Here is modern man, tragic modern man, torn between the faith of tradition and faith in himself. Faustus takes the risk in the end and is bundled off to hell in true mystery-play fashion. But the final scene does not convey that justice has been done, even though Faustus admits that his fate is just. Rather, the scene suggests that the transcendent human individual has been caught in the consequences of a dilemma that he might have avoided but that no imaginative man could have avoided. The sense of the interplay of fate and freedom is not unlike that of Oedipus. The sense of tragic ambiguity is more poignant in Faustus than in Oedipus or Tamburlaine because Faustus is far more introspective than either of the other heroes. The conflict is inner; the battle is for Faustus' soul, a kind of conflict that neither the Greeks nor Tamburlaine had to contend with. For this reason, and not because it advocates Christian doctrine, the play has been called the first Christian tragedy. (see also  "Tragicall History of Doctor Faustus, The")

 

5.3.1.3.2 Shakespearean

Shakespeare was a long time coming to his tragic phase, the six or seven years that produced his five greatest tragedies, Hamlet (c. 1601), Othello (c. 1602), King Lear (c. 1605), Macbeth (c. 1605), and Antony and Cleopatra (c. 1606). These were not the only plays written during those years. Troilus and Cressida may have come about the same time as Hamlet; All's Well That Ends Well, shortly after Othello; and Measure for Measure, shortly before King Lear. But the concentration of tragedies is sufficient to distinguish this period from that of the comedies and history plays before and of the so-called romances afterward. Although the tragic period cannot entirely be accounted for in terms of biography, social history, or current stage fashions, all of which have been adduced as causes, certain questions should be answered, at least tentatively: What is Shakespeare's major tragic theme and method? How do they relate to classical, medieval, and Renaissance traditions? In attempting to answer these questions, this proviso must be kept in mind: the degree to which he was consciously working in these traditions, consciously shaping his plays on early models, adapting Greek and Roman themes to his own purpose, or following the precepts of Aristotle must always remain conjectural. On the one hand, there is the comment by Ben Jonson that Shakespeare had "small Latin and less Greek," and Milton in "L'Allegro" speaks of him as "fancy's child" warbling "his native wood-notes wild," as if he were unique, a sport of nature. On the other hand, Shakespeare knew Jonson (who knew a great deal of Latin and Greek) and is said to have acted in Jonson's Sejanus in 1603, a very classical play, published in 1605 with a learned essay on Aristotle as preface. It can be assumed that Shakespeare knew the tradition. Certainly the Elizabethan theatre could not have existed without the Greek and Roman prototype. For all of its mixed nature--with comic and melodramatic elements jostling the tragic--the Elizabethan theatre retained some of the high concern, the sense of involvement, and even the ceremonial atmosphere of the Greek theatre. When tragedies were performed, the stage was draped in black. Modern studies have shown that the Elizabethan theatre retained many ties with both the Middle Ages and the tradition of the Greeks.

 

5.3.1.3.3 From comedy to tragedy.

Shakespeare's earliest and most lighthearted plays reveal a sense of the individual, his innerness, his reality, his difference from every other individual, and, at times, his plight. Certain stock characters, to be sure, appear in the early comedies. Even Falstaff, that triumphant individual, has a prototype in the braggadocio of Roman comedy, and even Falstaff has his tragic side. As Shakespeare's art developed, his concern for the plight or predicament or dilemma seems to have grown. His earliest history plays, for instance (Henry VI, Parts I, II, III), are little more than chronicles of the great pageant figures--kingship in all its colour and potency. Richard IIIwhich follows them, focusses with an intensity traditionally reserved for the tragic hero on one man and on the sinister forces, within and without, that bring him to destruction. From kingship, that is, Shakespeare turned to the king, the symbolic individual, the focal man, to whom whole societies look for their values and meanings. Thus Richard III is almost wholly sinister, though there exists a fascination about him, an all but tragic ambiguity. (see also  Falstaff, Sir John)

Although Shakespeare's developing sense of the tragic cannot be summed up adequately in any formula, one might hazard the following: he progressed from the individual of the early comedies; to the burdened individual, such as, in Henry IV, Prince Hal, the future Henry V, who manipulates, rather than suffers, the tragic ambiguities of the world; and, finally, in the great tragedies, to (in one critic's phrase) the overburdened individual, Lear being generally regarded as the greatest example. In these last plays, man is at the limits of his sovereignty as a human being, where everything that he has lived by, stood for, or loved is put to the test. Like Prometheus on the crag, or Oedipus as he learns who he is, or Medea deserted by Jason, the Shakespearean tragic heroes are at the extremities of their natures. Hamlet and Macbeth are thrust to the very edge of sanity; Lear and, momentarily, Othello are thrust beyond it. In every case, as in the Greek plays, the destructive forces seem to combine inner inadequacies or evils, such as Lear's temper or Macbeth's ambition, with external pressures, such as Lear's "tiger daughters," the witches in Macbeth, or Lady Macbeth's importunity. Once the destructive course is set going, these forces operate with the relentlessness the Greeks called Moira, or Fate. (see also  "King Lear," )

 

5.3.1.3.4 Shakespeare's tragic art.

At the height of his powers, Shakespeare's tragic vision comprehended the totality of possibilities for good and evil as nearly as the human imagination ever has. His heroes are the vehicles of psychological, societal, and cosmic forces that tend to ennoble and glorify humanity or infect it and destroy it. The logic of tragedy that possessed him demanded an insistence upon the latter. Initially, his heroes make free choices and are free time after time to turn back, but they move toward their doom as relentlessly as did Oedipus. The total tragic statement, however, is not limited to the fate of the hero. He is but the centre of an action that takes place in a context involving many other characters, each contributing a point of view, a set of values or antivalues to the complex dialectic of the play. In Macbeth's demon-ridden Scotland, where weird things happen to men and horses turn cannibal, there is the virtuous Malcolm, and society survives. Hamlet had the trustworthy friend Horatio, and, for all the bloodletting, what was "rotten" was purged. In the tragedies, most notably Lear, the Aeschylean notion of "knowledge through suffering" is powerfully dramatized; it is most obvious in the hero, but it is also shared by the society of which he is the focal figure. The flaw in the hero may be a moral failing or, sometimes, an excess of virtue; the flaw in society may be the rottenness of the Danish court in Hamlet or the corruption of the Roman world in Antony and Cleopatrathe flaw or fault or dislocation may be in the very universe itself, as dramatized by Lear's raving at the heavens or the ghosts that walk the plays or the witches that prophesy. All these faults, Shakespeare seems to be saying, are inevitabilities of the human condition. But they do not spell rejection, nihilsm, or despair. The hero may die, but in the words of the novelist E.M. Forster to describe the redeeming power of tragedy, "he has given us life."

Such is the precarious balance a tragedian must maintain: the cold, clear vision that sees the evil but is not maddened by it, a sense of the good that is equally clear but refuses the blandishments of optimism or sentimentalism. Few have ever sustained the balance for long. Aeschylus tended to slide off to the right, Euripides to the left, and even Sophocles had his hero transfigured at Colonus. Marlowe's early death should perhaps spare him the criticism his first plays warrant. Shakespeare's last two tragedies, Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra, are close to the edge of a valueless void. The atmosphere of Macbeth is murky with evil; the action moves with almost melodramatic speed from horror to horror. The forces for good rally at last, but Macbeth himself steadily deteriorates into the most nihilistic of all Shakespeare's tragic heroes, saved in nothing except the sense of a great nature, like Medea, gone wrong. Antony, in its ambiguities and irony, has been considered close to the Euripidean line of bitterness and detachment. Shakespeare himself soon modulated into another mood in his last plays, Cymbeline (c. 1609), The Winter's Tale (c. 1610), and The Tempest (c. 1611). Each is based on a situation that could have been developed into major tragedy had Shakespeare followed out its logic as he had done with earlier plays. For whatever reason, however, he chose not to. The great tragic questions are not pressed. The Tempest, especially, for all Prospero's charm and magnanimity, gives a sense of brooding melancholy over the ineradicable evil in mankind, a patient but sad acquiescence. All of these plays end in varying degrees of harmony and reconciliation. Shakespeare willed it so.

 

5.3.1.3.5 Decline in 17th-century England.

From Shakespeare's tragedies to the closing of the theatres in England by the Puritans in 1642, the quality of tragedy is steadily worse, if the best of the Greek and Shakespearean tragedies are taken as a standard. Among the leading dramatists of the period--John Webster, Thomas Middleton, Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, Cyril Tourneur, and John Ford--there were some excellent craftsmen and brilliant poets. Though each of them has a rightful place in the history of English drama, tragedy suffered a transmutation in their hands.

The Jacobean dramatists--those who flourished in England during the reign of James I--failed to transcend the negative tendencies they inherited from Elizabethan tragedy: a sense of defeat, a mood of spiritual despair implicit in Marlowe's tragic thought; in the nihilistic broodings of some of Shakespeare's characters in their worst moods--Hamlet, Gloucester in Lear, Macbeth; in the metaphoric implication of the theme of insanity, of man pressed beyond the limit of endurance, that runs through many of these tragedies; most importantly, perhaps, in the moral confusion ("fair is foul and foul is fair") that threatens to unbalance even the staunchest of Shakespeare's tragic heroes. This sinister tendency came to a climax about 1605 and was in part a consequence of the anxiety surrounding the death of Queen Elizabeth I and the accession of James I. Despite their negative tendencies, the Elizabethans, in general, had affirmed life and celebrated it; Shakespeare's moral balance, throughout even his darkest plays, remained firm. The Jacobeans, on the other hand, were possessed by death. They became superb analysts of moral confusion and of the darkened vision of humanity at cross purposes, preying upon itself; of lust, hate, and intrigue engulfing what is left of beauty, love, and integrity. There is little that is redemptive or that suggests, as had Aeschylus, that evil might be resolved by the enlightenment gained from suffering. As in the tragedies of Euripides, the protagonist's margin of freedom grows ever smaller. "You are the deed's creature," cries a murderer to his unwitting lady accomplice in Middleton's Changeling (1622), and a prisoner of her deed she remains. Many of the plays maintained a pose of ironic, detached reportage, without the sense of sympathetic involvement that the greatest tragedians have conveyed from the beginning. (see also  Jacobean literature, "Changeling, The")

Some of the qualities of the highest tragedians have been claimed for John Webster. One critic points to his search for a moral order as a link to Shakespeare and sees in his moral vision a basis for renewal. Webster's Duchess of Malfi(c. 1613) has been interpreted as a final triumph of life over death. Overwhelmed by final unleashed terror, the Duchess affirms the essential dignity of man. Despite such vestiges of greatness, however, the trend of tragedy was downward. High moral sensitivity and steady conviction are required to resist the temptation to resolve the intolerable tensions of tragedy into either the comfort of optimism or the relaxed apathy of despair. Periods of the creation of high tragedy are therefore few and shortlived. The demands on artist and audience alike are very great. Forms wear out, and public taste seems destined to go through inevitable cycles of health and disease. What is to one generation powerful and persuasive rhetoric becomes bombast and bathos to the next. The inevitable materials of tragedy--violence, madness, hate, and lust--soon lose their symbolic role and become perverted to the uses of melodrama and sensationalism, mixed, for relief, with the broadest comedy or farce. (see also  aesthetics)

These corruptions had gone too far when John Milton, 29 years after the closing of the theatres, attempted to bring back the true spirit and tone of tragedy, which he called "the gravest, moralest, and most profitable of all other Poems." His Samson Agonistes(1671), however, is magnificent "closet tragedy"--drama more suitable for reading than for popular performance. Modelled on the Prometheus, it recalls Aeschylus' tragedy both in its form, in which the immobilized hero receives a sequence of visitors, and in its theme, in which there is a resurgence of the hero's spirit under stress. With Restoration comedy in full swing, however, and with the "heroic play" (an overly moralized version of tragedy) about to reach its crowning achievement in John Dryden's All for Love only seven years later (published 1678), Samson Agonistes was an anachronism.

 

5.3.1.4 Neoclassical.

 

5.3.1.4.1 Corneille and Racine.

Another attempt to bring back the ancient form had been going on for some time across the English Channel, in France. The French Classical tragedy, whose monuments are Pierre Corneille's Cid (1637) and Jean Racine's Bérénice (1670) and Phèdre (1677), made no attempt to be popular in the way of the Elizabethan theatre. The plays were written by and for intellectual aristocrats, who came together in an elite theatre, patronized by royalty and nobility. Gone were the bustle and pageantry of the Elizabethan tragedies, with their admixtures of whatever modes and moods the dramatists thought would work. The French playwrights submitted themselves to the severe discipline they derived from the Greek models and especially the "rules," as they interpreted them, laid down by Aristotle. The unities of place, time, and action were strictly observed. One theme, the conflict between Passion and Reason, was uppermost. The path of Reason was the path of Duty and Obligation (noblesse oblige), and that path had been clearly plotted by moralists and philosophers, both ancient and modern. In this sense there was nothing exploratory in the French tragedy; existing moral and spiritual norms were insisted upon. The norms are never criticized or tested as Aeschylus challenged the Olympians or as Marlowe presented, with startling sympathy, the Renaissance overreacher. Corneille's Cid shows Duty triumphant over Passion, and, as a reward, hero and heroine are happily united. By the time of Phèdre, Corneille's proud affirmation of the power of the will and the reason over passion had given way to what Racine called "stately sorrow," with which he asks the audience to contemplate Phèdre's heroic, but losing, moral struggle. Her passion for her stepson, Hippolyte, bears her down relentlessly. Her fine principles and heroic will are of no avail. Both she and Hippolyte are destroyed. The action is limited to one terrible day; there is no change of scene; there is neither comic digression nor relief--the focus on the process by which a great nature goes down is sharp and intense. Such is the power of Racine's poetry (it is untranslatable), his conception of character, and his penetrating analysis of it, that it suggests the presence of Sophoclean "heroic humanism." In this sense it could be said that Racine tested the norms, that he uncovered a cruel injustice in the nature of a code that could destroy such a person as Phèdre. Once again, here is a world of tragic ambiguity, in which no precept or prescription can answer complicated human questions. (see also  French literature)

 

5.3.1.4.2 The English "heroic play."

This ambiguity was all but eliminated in the "heroic play" that vied with the comedy of the Restoration stage in England in the latter part of the 17th century. After the vicissitudes of the Civil War, the age was hungry for heroism. An English philosopher of the time, Thomas Hobbes, defined the purpose of the type: "The work of an heroic poem is to raise admiration, principally for three virtues, valor, beauty, and love." Moral concern, beginning with Aeschylus, has always been central in tragedy, but in the works of the great tragedians this concern was exploratory and inductive. The moral concern of the heroic play is the reverse. It is deductive and dogmatic. The first rule, writes Dryden (following the contemporary French critic, René Le Bossu) in his preface to his Troilus and Cressida (1679), is "to make the moral of the work; that is, to lay down to yourself what that precept of morality shall be, which you would insinuate into the people . . . ." In All for Lovethe moral is all too clear: Antony must choose between the path of honour and his illicit passion for Cleopatra. He chooses Cleopatra, and they are both destroyed. Only Dryden's poetry, with its air of emotional argumentation, manages to convey human complexities in spite of his moral bias and saves the play from artificiality--makes it, in fact, the finest near-tragic production of its age.

 

5.3.1.4.3 The eclipse of tragedy.

Although the annals of the drama from Dryden onward are filled with plays called tragedies by their authors, the form as it has been defined here went into an eclipse during the late 17th, the 18th, and the early 19th centuries. Reasons that have been suggested for the decline include the politics of the Restoration in England; the rise of science and, with it, the optimism of the Enlightenment throughout Europe; the developing middle class economy; the trend toward reassuring deism in theology; and, in literature, the rise of the novel and the vogue of satire. The genius of the age was discursive and rationalistic. In France and later in England, belief in Evil was reduced to the perception of evils, which were looked upon as institutional and therefore remediable. The nature of man was no longer the problem; rather, it was the better organization and management of men. The old haunting fear and mystery, the sense of ambiguity at the centre of man's nature and of dark forces working against him in the universe, were replaced by a new and confident dogma. Tragedy never lost its high prestige in the minds of the leading spirits. Theorizing upon it were men of letters as diverse as Dr. Samuel Johnson, David Hume, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Percy Bysshe Shelley and German philosophers from Gotthold Lessing in the 18th century to Friedrich Nietzsche in the 19th. Revivals of Shakespeare's tragedies were often bowdlerized or altered, as in the happy ending for Lear in a production of 1681. Those who felt themselves called upon to write tragedies produced little but weak imitations. Shelley tried it once, in The Cenci(1819), but, as his wife wrote, "the bent of his mind went the other way"--which way may be seen in his Prometheus Unbound(1820), in which Zeus is overthrown and man enters upon a golden age, ruled by the power of love. Goethe had the sense to stay away from tragedy: "The mere attempt to write tragedy," he said, "might be my undoing." He concluded his two-part Faust (1808, 1832) in the spirit of the 19th-century optimistic humanitarianism. It was not until the latter part of the 19th century, with the plays of a Norwegian, Henrik Ibsen, a Russian, Anton Chekhov, a Swede, August Strindberg, and, later, an American, Eugene O'Neill, that something of the original vision returned to inspire the tragic theatre.

 

5.3.1.5 A new vehicle: the novel.

The theme and spirit of tragedy, meanwhile, found a new vehicle in the novel. This development is important, however far afield it may seem from the work of the formal dramatists. The English novelist Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights(1847), in its grim Yorkshire setting, reflects the original concerns of tragedy: i.e., the terrifying divisions in nature and human nature, love that creates and destroys, character at once fierce and pitiable, destructive actions that are willed yet seemingly destined, as if by a malicious fate, yet the whole controlled by an imagination that learns as it goes. Another English novelist, Thomas Hardy, in the preface to his Woodlanders (1887), speaks of the rural setting of this and other of his novels as being comparable to the stark and simple setting of the Greek theatre, giving his novels something of that drama's intensity and sharpness of focus. His grimly pessimistic view of man's nature and destiny and of the futility of human striving, as reflected in his novels The Return of the Native (1878), Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1891), and Jude the Obscure (1895), is barely redeemed for tragedy by his sense of the beauty of nature and of the beauty and dignity of human character and effort, however unavailing.

The work of the Polish-born English novelist Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) provides another kind of setting for novels used as vehicles of the tragic sense. Lord Jim(1900), originally conceived as a short story, grew to a full-length novel as Conrad found himself exploring in ever greater depth the perplexing, ambiguous problem of lost honour and guilt, expiation and heroism. Darkness and doubt brood over the tale, as they do over his long story "Heart of Darkness" (1899), in which Conrad's narrator, Marlow, again leads his listeners into the shadowy recesses of the human heart, with its forever unresolved and unpredictable capacities for good and evil.

 

5.3.1.5.1 Dostoyevsky's

In Russia, the novels of Fyodor Dostoyevsky, particularly Crime and Punishment(1866) and The Brothers Karamazov(1880), revealed a world of paradox, alienation, and loss of identity, prophetic of the major tragic themes of the 20th century. More than any earlier novelist, Dostoyevsky appropriated to his fictions the realm of the subconscious and explored in depth its shocking antinomies and discontinuities. Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, frequently acknowledged his indebtedness to Dostoyevsky's psychological insights. Dostoyevsky's protagonists are reminiscent of Marlowe's Doctor Faustus, caught between the old world of orthodox belief and the new world of intense individualism, each with its insistent claims and justifications. The battleground is once more the soul of man, and the stakes are survival. Each of his major heroes--Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment and the three Karamazovs--wins a victory, but it is in each case morally qualified, partial, or transient. The harmonious resolutions of the novels seem forced and are neither decisive of the action nor definitive of Dostoyevsky's total tragic view. (see also  psychological novel)

 

5.3.1.5.2 The American tragic novel.

In America, Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel The Scarlet Letter(1850) and Herman Melville's Moby Dick(1851) are surprisingly complete embodiments of the tragic form, written as they were at a time of booming American optimism, materialistic expansion, and sentimentalism in fiction--and no tragic theatre whatever. In The Scarlet Letter, a story of adultery set in colonial New England, the heroine's sense of sin is incomplete; her spirited individualism insists (as she tells her lover) that "what we did had a consecration of its own." The resulting conflict in her heart and mind is never resolved, and, although it does not destroy her, she lives out her life in gray and tragic isolation. Melville said that he was encouraged by Hawthorne's exploration of "a certain tragic phase of humanity," by his deep broodings and by the "blackness of darkness" in him, to proceed with similar explorations of his own in Moby Dick, which he dedicated to Hawthorne. Its protagonist, Captain Ahab, represents a return to what Melville called (defending Ahab's status as tragic hero) a "mighty pageant creature, formed for noble tragedies," whose "ponderous heart," "globular brain," and "nervous lofty language" prove that even an old Nantucket sea captain can take his place with kings and princes of the ancient drama. Shakespearean echoes abound in the novel; some of its chapters are written in dramatic form. Its theme and central figure, reminiscent of Job and Lear in their search for justice and of Oedipus in his search for the truth, all show what Melville might have been--a great tragic dramatist had there been a tragic theatre in America. (see also  American literature)

Some American novelists of the 20th century carried on, however partially, the tragic tradition. Theodore Dreiser's American Tragedy(1925) is typical of the naturalistic novel, which is also represented by the work of Stephen Crane, James T. Farrell, John Steinbeck. Though showing great sensitivity to environmental or sociological evils, such works fail to embody the high conception of character (as Melville describes it above) and are concerned mainly with externals, or reportage. The protagonists are generally "good" (or weak) and beaten down by society. The novels of Henry James, which span the period from 1876 to 1904, are concerned with what has been called the tragedy of manners. The society James projects is sophisticated, subtle, and sinister. The innocent and the good are destroyed, like Milly Theale in The Wings of the Dove(1902), who in the end "turns her face to the wall" and dies but in her death brings new vision and new values to those whose betrayals had driven her to her death.

The trend in American fiction, as in the drama, continued in the 20th century, toward the pathos of the victim--the somehow inadequate, the sometimes insignificant figure destroyed by such vastly unequal forces that the struggle is scarcely significant. F. Scott Fitzgerald's Gatsby in his novel The Great Gatsby(1925) is betrayed by his own meretricious dream, nurtured by a meretricious society. The hero of Ernest Hemingway's novel A Farewell to Arms(1929), disillusioned by war, makes a separate peace, deserts, and joins his beloved in neutral Switzerland. When she dies in childbirth, he sees it as still another example of how "they"--society, the politicians who run the war, or the mysterious forces destroying Catherine--get you in the end. The tone is lyric and pathetic rather than tragic (though Hemingway called the novel his Romeo and Juliet). Grief turns the hero away from, rather than toward, a deeper examination of life.

Only the novels of William Faulkner, in their range and depth and in their powerful assault on the basic tragic themes, recall unmistakably the values of the tragic tradition. His "saga of the South," as recounted in a series of novels (notably Sartoris, 1929; The Sound and the Fury, 1929; As I Lay Dying, 1930; Sanctuary, 1931; Light in August, 1932; Absalom, Absalom! 1936; Intruder in the Dust, 1948; Requiem for a Nun, 1951), incorporates some 300 years of Southern history from Indian days to the present. At first regarded as a mere exploiter of decadence, he can now be seen as gradually working beyond reportage and toward meaning. His sociology became more and more the "sin" of the South--the rape of the land, slavery, the catastrophe of the Civil War and its legacy of a cynical and devitalized materialism. Increasingly he saw the conflict as internal. The subject of art, Faulkner said in his 1949 Nobel Prize speech, is "the human heart in conflict with itself." His insistence is on guilt as the evidence of man's fate, and on the possibility of expiation as the assertion of man's freedom. Compassion, endurance, and the capacity to learn are seen to be increasingly effective in his characters. In the veiled analogies to Christ as outcast and redeemer in Light in August and in the more explicit Christology of A Fable (1954), in the pastoral serenity following the anguish and horror in Light in August, and in the high comedy of the last scene of Intruder in the Dust, Faulkner puts into tragic fiction the belief he stated in his Nobel speech: "I decline to accept the end of man."

 

5.3.2 TRAGEDY AND MODERN DRAMA

 

5.3.2.1 Tragic themes in Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov.

The movement toward naturalism in fiction in the latter decades of the 19th century did much to purge both the novel and the drama of the sentimentality and evasiveness that had so long emasculated them. In Norway Henrik Ibsen incorporated in his plays the smug and narrow ambitiousness of his society. The hypocrisy of overbearing men and women replace, in their fashion, the higher powers of the old tragedy. His major tragic theme is the futility, leading to catastrophe, of the idealist's effort to create a new and better social order. The "Problem play"--one devoted to a particular social issue--is saved in his hand from the flatness of a sociological treatise by a sense of doom, a pattern of retribution, reminiscent of the ancient Greeks. In Pillars of Society (1877), The Wild Duck (published 1884), Rosmersholm (published 1886), and The Master Builder (published 1892), for example, one sacrifice is expiated by another.

In Sweden, August Strindberg, influenced by Ibsen, was a powerful force in the movement. The Father (1887) and Miss Julie (published 1888) recall Ibsen's attacks on religious, moral, and political orthodoxies. Strindberg's main concern, however, is with the destructive effects of sexual maladjustment and psychic imbalance. Not since Euripides' Medea or Racine's Phèdre had the tragic aspects of sex come under such powerful analysis. In this respect, his plays look forward to O'Neill's.

Anton Chekhov, the most prominent Russian dramatist of the period, wrote plays about the humdrum life of inconspicuous, sensitive people (Uncle Vanya, 1899; The Three Sisters, 1901; and The Cherry Orchard, 1904, are typical), whose lives fall prey to the hollowness and tedium of a disintegrating social order. They are a brood of lesser Hamlets without his compensating vision of a potential greatness. As in the plays of the Scandinavian dramatists, Chekhov's vision of this social evil is penetrating and acute, but the powerful, resistant counterthrust that makes for tragedy is lacking. It is a world of victims.

 

5.3.2.2 American tragic dramatists.

In little of the formal drama between the time of Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov and the present are the full dimensions of tragedy presented. Some critics suggested that it was too late for tragedy, that modern man no longer valued himself highly enough, that too many sociological and ideological factors were working against the tragic temperament. The long and successful career of Eugene O'Neill may be a partial answer to this criticism. He has been called the first American to succeed in writing tragedy for the theatre, a fulfillment of his avowed purpose, for he had declared that in the tragic, alone, lay the meaning of life--and the hope. He sought in Freud's concept of the subconscious the equivalent of the Greek idea of fate and modelled his great trilogy, Mourning Becomes Electra(1931), on Aeschylus' Oresteia. Although the hovering sense of an ancient evil is powerful, the psychological conditioning controls the characters too nakedly. They themselves declare forces that determine their behaviour, so that they seem almost to connive in their own manipulation. Desire Under the Elms(1924) presents a harsh analysis of decadence in the sexual and avaricious intrigues of a New England farmer's family, unrelieved by manifestations of the transcendent human spirit. The Great God Brown (1926) and Long Day's Journey into Night(1939-41; first performance, 1956) come closer to true tragedy. In the latter, the capacity for self-knowledge is demonstrated by each member of the wrangling Tyrone family (actually, O'Neill's own; the play is frankly autobiographical). The insistent theme of the "death wish" (another example of Freud's influence), however, indicates too radical a pessimism for tragedy; even the character of Edmund Tyrone, O'Neill's own counterpart, confesses that he has always been a little in love with death, and in another late play, The Iceman Cometh(1939), the death wish is more strongly expressed. Although he never succeeded in establishing a tragic theatre comparable to the great theatres of the past, O'Neill made a significant contribution in his sustained concentration on subjects at least worthy of such a theatre. He made possible the significant, if slighter, contributions of Arthur Miller, whose Death of a Salesman (1949) and A View from the Bridge (1955) contain material of tragic potential that is not fully realized. Tennessee Williams' Streetcar Named Desire(1947) is a sensitive study of the breakdown of a character under social and psychological stress. As with Miller's plays, however, it remains in the area of pathos rather than tragedy.

 

5.3.2.3 Other serious drama.

The 20th century has produced much serious and excellent drama, which, though not in the main line of the tragic tradition, deserves mention. In British theatre, George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan(1923) and T.S. Eliot's Murder in the Cathedral(1935) dramatized with great power both doubt and affirmation, the ambiguity of human motives, and the possibility of fruitless suffering that are true of the human condition as reflected by tragedy. During the Irish literary revival, the work of J.M. Synge (Riders to the Sea, 1904) and Sean O'Casey (Shadow of a Gunman, 1923), like Faulkner's work, sought a tragic theme in the destiny of a whole people. The masterpiece of this movement, however, is not a tragedy but a comic inversion of the ancient tragedy of Oedipus--Synge's Playboy of the Western World(1907).

The drama of social protest--exemplified in such works as the Russian Maksim Gorky's Lower Depths (1902), the German Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Opera (1928) and Mother Courage (1941), and the American Clifford Odets' Waiting for Lefty (1935)--shares the tragedians' concern for evils that frustrate or destroy human values. The evils, however, are largely external, identifiable, and, with certain recommended changes in the social order, remediable. The type shows how vulnerable tragedy is to dogma or programs of any sort. A British author, George Orwell, suggested in Nineteen Eighty-e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">four that tragedy would cease to exist under pure Marxist statism. Brecht's fine sense of irony and moral paradox redeem him from absolute dogmatism but give his work a hard satiric thrust that is inimical to tragedy. Traditional values and moral imperatives are all but neutralized in the existentialist worlds of the dramas and novels of Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, two outstanding philosopher-dramatists of the post World War II era. In their works, the protagonist is called upon to forge his own values, if he can, in a world in which the disparity between the ideal (what man longs for) and the real (what he gets) is so great as to reduce the human condition to incoherence and absurdity. Plays that led to the coinage of the term the theatre of the absurd are exemplified by Waiting for Godot (1952) and The Killer (1959), respectively by the Irish writer Samuel Beckett and the Romanian Eugène Ionesco, both of whom pursued their careers in Paris. Here, the theme of victimization is at its extreme, the despair and defeat almost absolute.

A coherent and affirmative view of man, society, and the cosmos is vital to tragedy--however tentative the affirmation may be. Unresolved questions remain at the end of every tragedy. There is always an irrational factor, disturbing, foreboding, not to be resolved by the sometime consolations of philosophy and religion or by any science of the mind or body; there is irretrievable loss, usually though not necessarily symbolized by the death of the hero. In the course of the action, however, in the development of character, theme, and situation and in the conceptual suggestiveness of language, tragedy presents the positive terms in which these questions might be answered. The human qualities are manifest, however limited; man's freedom is real, however marginal. The forces that bear him down may be mysterious but actual--fate, the gods, chance, the power of his own or the race's past working through his soul. Though never mastered, they can be contended with, defied, and, at least in spirit, transcended. The process is cognitive; man can learn.

 

5.3.2.4 Absence of tragedy in Oriental drama.

In no way can the importance of a conceptual basis for tragedy be better illustrated than by a look at other drama-producing cultures with radically different ideas of the individual, his nature, and his destiny. While the cultures of India, China, and Japan have produced significant and highly artistic drama, there is little here to compare in magnitude, intensity, and freedom of form to the tragedies of the West.

In Buddhist teaching, the aim of the individual is to suppress and regulate all those questioning, recalcitrant, rebellious impulses that first impel the Western hero toward his tragic course. The goal of Nirvana is the extinction of those impulses, the quieting of the passions, a kind of quietus in which worldly existence ceases. Western tragedy celebrates life, and the tragic hero clings to it: to him, it is never "sweet to die" for his country or for anything else, and the fascination for Western audiences is to follow the hero--as it were, from the inside--as he struggles to assert himself and his values against whatever would deny them. In Oriental drama, there is no such intense focus on the individual. In the Japanese No plays, for instance, the hero may be seen in moments of weariness and despair, of anger or confusion, but the mood is lyric, and the structure of the plays is ritualistic, with a great deal of choral intoning, dancing, and stylized action. Although a number of No plays can be produced together to fill a day's performance, the individual plays are very short, hardly the length of a Western one-act play. No plays affirm orthodoxy, rather than probing and questioning it, as Western tragedies do. (see also  no theatre)

The drama in India has a long history, but there too the individual is subordinated to the mood of the idyll or romance or epic adventure. Perhaps one reason why the drama of India never developed the tragic orientation of the West is its removal from the people; it has never known the communal involvement of the Greek and Elizabethan theatres. Produced mainly for court audiences, an upper class elite, it never reflected the sufferings of common (or uncommon) humanity. Only recently has the drama in China embraced the vigour and realism of the common people, but the drama is in the service not of the individual but of a political ideology, which replaces the traditional themes of ancestor worship and filial piety. In all this, the mighty pageant figure--Oedipus, Prometheus, Lear, or Ahab standing for the individual as he alone sees and feels the workings of an unjust universe--is absent. (see also  Indian literature, Chinese literature)

An example from the No plays will illustrate these generalizations. In The Hoka Priests, by Zenchiku Ujinobu (1414-99), a son is confronted with Hamlet's problem--i.e., that of avenging the death of his father. He is uncertain how to proceed, since his father's murderer has many bold fellows to stand by him, while he is all alone. He persuades his brother, a priest, to help him, and disguising themselves as priests, they concoct a little plot to engage the murderer in religious conversation. There are a few words of lament--"Oh why,/ Why back to the bitter World/ Are we borne by our intent?"--and the Chorus sings lyrically about the uncertainties of life. The theme of the conversation is the unreality of the World and the reality of Thought. At an appropriate moment, the brothers cry, "Enough! Why longer hide our plot?" The murderer places his hat on the floor and exits. The brothers mime the killing of the murderer in a stylized attack upon the hat, while the Chorus describes and comments on the action: "So when the hour was come/ Did these two brothers/ By sudden resolution/ Destroy their father's foe./ For valour and piety are their names remembered/ Even in this aftertime" (translated by Arthur Waley, The No Plays of Japan, 1921).

Thus the No avoids directly involving the audience in the emotions implicit in the events portrayed on the stage. It gives only a slight hint of the spiritual struggle in the heart of the protagonist--a struggle that is always speedily resolved in favour of traditional teaching. In play after play the action does not take place before our eyes but is reenacted by the ghost of one of the participants. Thus, the events presented are tinged with memory or longing--hardly the primary emotions that surge through and invigorate Western tragedy at its best.

 

5.3.2.5 Loss of viability in the West.

The absence, even in the West, of a great tragic theatre in the 20th century may be explained by the pantheon of panaceas to which modern man has subscribed. Politics, psychology, social sciences, physical sciences, nationalism, the occult--each offered a context in terms of which he might act out his destiny, were it not crowded out by the others. Modern man is not tested but harried and not by gods but, too often, by demons. In the dramas of Athens and England, tragedy was born of the impossibility of a clear-cut victory in man's struggle with powers greater than himself. In the modern drama, the struggle itself seems impossible.

The would-be hero is saved from a meaningful death by being condemned to a meaningless life. This, too, however, has its tragic dimension, in its illustration of the power of evil to survive from millennium to millennium in the presence or the absence of the gods.

Tragedy is a means of coming to terms with that evil. To assume that tragedy has lost viability is to forget that this viability was seriously questioned by the first Western philosopher to address himself to the problem. An account of the development of the theory of tragedy will reveal a resourcefulness in man's critical powers that can help to compensate, or occasionally even supersede, his lapsing creative powers. (R.B.S.)

 

5.3.3 THEORY OF TRAGEDY

 

5.3.3.1 Classical theories.

As the great period of Athenian drama drew to an end at the beginning of the 4th century BC, Athenian philosophers began to analyze its content and formulate its structure. In the thought of Plato (c. 427-347 BC), the history of the criticism of tragedy began with speculation on the role of censorship. To Plato (in the dialogue on the Laws) the state was the noblest work of art, a representation (mimesis) of the fairest and best life. He feared the tragedians' command of the expressive resources of language, which might be used to the detriment of worthwhile institutions. He feared, too, the emotive effect of poetry, the Dionysian element that is at the very basis of tragedy. Therefore, he recommended that the tragedians submit their works to the rulers, for approval, without which they could not be performed. It is clear that tragedy, by nature exploratory, critical, independent, could not live under such a regimen. (see also  literary criticism)

Plato is answered, in effect and perhaps intentionally, by Aristotle's PoeticsAristotle (384-322 BC) defends the purgative power of tragedy and, in direct contradiction to Plato, makes moral ambiguity the essence of tragedy. The tragic hero must be neither a villain nor a virtuous man but a "character between these two extremes, . . . a man who is not eminently good and just, yet whose misfortune is brought about not by vice or depravity, but by some error or frailty [e="mso-bidi-font-style:normal">hamartia]." The effect on the audience will be similarly ambiguous. A perfect tragedy, he says, should imitate actions that excite "pity and fear." He uses Sophocles' Oedipus the Kingas a paradigm. Near the beginning of the play, Oedipus asks how his stricken city (the counterpart of Plato's state) may cleanse itself, and the world he uses for the purifying action is a form of the word catharsis. The concept of catharsis provides Aristotle with his reconciliation with Plato, a means by which to satisfy the claims of both ethics and art. "Tragedy," says Aristotle, "is an imitation [mimesis] of an action that is serious, complete and of a certain magnitude . . . through pity and fear effecting the proper purgation [catharsis] of these emotions." Ambiguous means may be employed, Aristotle maintains in contrast to Plato, to a virtuous and purifying end. (see also  Aristotelian criticism)

To establish the basis for a reconciliation between ethical and artistic demands, Aristotle insists that the principal element in the structure of tragedy is not character but plot. Since the erring protagonist is always in at least partial opposition to the state, the importance of tragedy lies not in him but in the enlightening event. "Most important of all," Aristotle said, "is the structure of the incidents. For tragedy is an imitation not of men but of an action and of life, and life consists in action, and its end is a mode of action, not a quality . . . ." Aristotle considered the plot to be the soul of a tragedy, with character in second place. The goal of tragedy is not suffering but the knowledge that issues from it, as the denouement issues from a plot. The most powerful elements of emotional interest in tragedy, according to Aristotle, are reversal of intention or situation (peripeteia) and recognition scenes (anagnorisis), and each is most effective when it is coincident with the other. In Oedipus, for example, the messenger who brings Oedipus news of his real parentage, intending to allay his fears, brings about a sudden reversal of his fortune, from happiness to misery, by compelling him to recognize that his wife is also his mother.

Later critics found justification for their own predilections in the authority of Greek drama and Aristotle. For example, the Roman poet Horace (65-8 BC), in his Ars poetica(Art of Poetry), elaborated the Greek tradition of extensively narrating offstage events into a dictum on decorum forbidding events such as Medea's butchering of her boys from being performed on stage. And where Aristotle had discussed tragedy as a separate genre, superior to epic poetry, Horace discussed it as a genre with a separate style, again with considerations of decorum foremost. A theme for comedy may not be set forth in verses of tragedy; each style must keep to the place alloted it.

On the basis of this kind of stylistic distinction, the Aeneidthe epic poem of Virgil, Horace's contemporary, is called a tragedy by the fictional Virgil in Dante's Divine Comedyon the grounds that the Aeneid treats only of lofty things. Dante (1265-1321) calls his own poem a comedy partly because he includes "low" subjects in it. He makes this distinction in his De vulgari eloquentia(1304-05; "Of Eloquence in the Vulgar") in which he also declares the subjects fit for the high, tragic style to be salvation, love, and virtue. Despite the presence of these subjects in this poem, he calls it a comedy because his style of language is "careless and humble" and because it is in the vernacular tongue rather than Latin. Dante makes a further distinction:

Comedy . . . differs from tragedy in its subject matter, in this way, that tragedy in its beginning is admirable and quiet, in its ending or catastrophe fould and horrible . . . From this it is evident why the present work is called a comedy.

Dante's emphasis on the outcome of the struggle rather than on the nature of the struggle is repeated by Chaucer and for the same reason: their belief in the providential nature of human destiny. Like Dante, he was under the influence of De consolatione philosophiae (Consolation of Philosophy), the work of the 6th-century Roman philosopher Boethius (c. 480-524) that he translated into English. Chaucer considered Fortune to be beyond the influence of the human will. In his Canterbury Tales, he introduces "The Monk's Tale" by defining tragedy as "a certeyn storie . . . / of him that stood in greet prosperitee,/ And is y-fallen out of heigh degree/ Into miserie, and endeth wrecchedly." Again, he calls his Troilus and Criseydea tragedy because, in the words of Troilus, "all that comth, comth by necessitee . . . / That forsight of divine purveyaunce/ Hath seyn alwey me to forgon Criseyde."

 

5.3.3.2 Elizabethan approaches.

The critical tradition of separating the tragic and comic styles is continued by the Elizabethan English poet Sir Philip Sidney, whose Defence of Poesie(also published as An Apologie for Poetrie) has the distinction of containing the most extended statement on tragedy in the English Renaissance and the misfortune of having been written in the early 1580s (published 1595), before the first plays of Shakespeare, or even of Marlowe. Nevertheless, Sidney wrote eloquently of "high and excellent tragedy, that . . . with stirring the affects of admiration and commiseration teacheth the uncertainty of this world and upon how weak foundations gilden roofs are builded."

Since the word admiration here means awe, Sidney's "admiration and commiseration" are similar to Aristotle's "pity and fear." He differs from Aristotle, however, in preferring epic to tragic poetry. The Renaissance was almost as concerned as Plato with the need to justify poetry on ethical grounds, and Sidney ranks epic higher than tragedy because it provides morally superior models of behaviour.

Sidney goes further than mere agreement with Aristotle, however, in championing the unities of time and place. Aristotle had asserted the need for a unity of time: "Tragedy endeavors, as far as possible, to confine itself to a single revolution of the sun, or but slightly to exceed this limit." Sidney, following the lead of a 16th-century Italian Neoclassicist, Ludovico Castelvetro, added the unity of place: "the stage should always represent but one place, and the uttermost time presupposed in it should be, both by Aristotle's precept and common reason, but one day . . ." Sidney also seconds Horace's disapproval of the mingling of styles, which Sidney says produces a "mongrel tragicomedy."

Shakespeare's opinion of the relative merits of the genres is unknown, but his opinion of the problem itself may be surmised. In Hamlet he puts these words in the mouth of the foolish old pedant Polonius: "The best actors in the world, either for tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral, pastoral-comical, historical-pastoral, tragical-historical, tragical-comical-historical-pastoral; scene individable, or poem unlimited . . ." (Act II, scene 2). As to the classical unities, Shakespeare adheres to them only twice and neither time in a tragedy, in The Comedy of Errors and The Tempest. And through the mouths of his characters, Shakespeare, like Aristotle, puts himself on both sides of the central question of tragic destiny--that of freedom and necessity. Aristotle says that a tragic destiny is precipitated by the hero's tragic fault, his "error or frailty" (hamartia), but Aristotle also calls this turn of events a change of "fortune." Shakespeare's Cassius in Julius Caesar says, "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, / But in ourselves . . . ," and in King Lear, Edmund ridicules a belief in fortune as the "foppery of the world." But Hamlet, in a comment on the nature of hamartia, is a fatalist when he broods on the "mole of nature," the "one defect" that some men are born with, "wherein they are not guilty," and that brings them to disaster (Act I, scene 4). Similarly, Sophocles' Oedipus, though he says, "It was Apollo who brought my woes to pass," immediately adds, "it was my hand that struck my eyes." These ambiguities are a powerful source of the tragic emotion of Athenian and Elizabethan drama, unequalled by traditions that are more sure of themselves, such as French Neoclassicism, or less sure of themselves, such as 20th-century drama.

 

5.3.3.3 Neoclassical theory.

In the Neoclassical period Aristotle's reasonableness was replaced by rationality, and his moral ambiguity by the mechanics of "poetic justice." In the 17th century, under the guise of a strict adherence to Classical formulas, additional influences were brought to bear on the theory of tragedy. In France, the theological doctrine of Jansenism, which called for an extreme orthodoxy, exercised a strong influence. In England, the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, with the reopening of the theatres, introduced a period of witty and lusty literature. In both nations, the influence of natural law--the idea that laws binding upon humanity are inferable from nature--increased, along with the influence of the exact sciences. Critics in both nations declared that Aristotle's "rules" were made to reduce nature into a method.

In his 1679 preface to Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida, Dryden says, "we lament not, but detest a wicked man, we are glad when we behold his crimes are punished, and that Poetical justice is done upon him." Similar sentiments, calling for the punishment of crimes and the reward of virtue, were expressed in France. Catharsis had become vindication. Thomas Rymer, one of the most influential English critics of the time, in The Tragedies of The Last Age(1678), wrote that

besides the purging of the passions, something must stick by observing . . . that necessary relation and chain, whereby the causes and the effects, the vertues and rewards, the vices and their punishments are proportion'd and link'd together, how deep and dark soever are laid the Springs, and however intricate and involv'd are their operations.

The effect was to rob tragedy of a great deal of its darkness and depth. The temper of the age demanded that mystery be brought to the surface and to the light, a process that had effects not merely different from but in part antipathetic to tragedy. Nicolas Boileau, the chief spokesman of the French Neoclassical movement, in his discussion of pity and fear in Art Poétique (1674), qualified these terms with the adjectives "beguiling" and "pleasant" (pitié charmante, douce terreur), which radically changed their meaning. The purged spectator became a grateful patient.

In his preface to Phèdre (1677), Racine subscribed to the quid pro quo view of retribution.

I have written no play in which virtue has been more celebrated than in this one. The smallest faults are here severely punished; the mere idea of a crime is looked upon with as much horror as the crime itself.

Of Phèdre herself, his greatest heroine, he says,

I have taken the trouble to make her a little less hateful than she is in the ancient versions of this tragedy, in which she herself resolves to accuse Hippolytus. I judged that that calumny had about it something too base and black to be put into the mouth of a Princess . . . This depravity seemed to me more appropriate to the character of a nurse, whose inclinations might be supposed to be more servile . . . .

For Aristotle, pity and fear made a counterpoint typical of Classicism, each tempering the other to create a balance. For Racine, pity and fear each must be tempered in itself. In the marginalia to his fragmentary translation of Aristotle's Poetics, Racine wrote that in arousing the passions of pity and fear, tragedy

removes from them whatever they have of the excessive and the vicious and brings them back to a moderated condition and conformable to reason.

Corneille contradicted Aristotle outright. Discussing Le Cid he said, in A Discourse on Tragedy (1660),

Our pity ought to give us fear of falling into similar misfortune, and purge us of that excess of love which is the cause of their disaster . . . but I do not know that it gives us that, or purges us, and I am afraid that the reasoning of Aristotle on this point is but a pretty idea . . . it is not requisite that these two passions always serve together . . . it suffices . . . that one of the two bring about the purgation. . . .

The accommodation of tragedy to Neoclassical ideas of order demanded a simplification of tragedy's complexities and ambiguities. The simplifying process was now inspired, however, by the fundamental tenet of all primitive scientific thought namely, that orderliness and naturalness are in a directly proportionate relationship. Racine declared the basis of the naturalistic effect in drama to be a strict adherence to the unities, which now seem the opposite of naturalistic. In his preface to Bérénice (1670), he asked what probability there could be when a multitude of things that would scarcely happen in several weeks are made to happen in a day. The illusion of probability, which is the Aristotelian criterion for the verisimilitude of a stage occurrence, is made to sound as if it were the result of a strict dramaturgical determinism, on the grounds that necessity is the truest path to freedom.

Racine and Corneille both contradicted Dante and Chaucer on the indispensability of a catastrophic final scene. "Blood and deaths," said Racine, are not necessary, for "it is enough that the action be grand, that the actors be heroic, that the passions be aroused" to produce "that stately sorrow that makes the whole pleasure of tragedy" (preface to Bérénice).

Milton was artistically much more conservative. He prefaced his Samson Agonistes(1671) with a warning against the

error of intermixing Comic stuff with Tragic sadness and gravity; or introducing trivial and vulgar persons: which by all judicious hath been counted absurd; and brought in without discretion, corruptly to gratify the people.

He bypassed Shakespeare for the ancients and ranked Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides as tragic poets unequalled yet by any others. Part of the rule, for Milton, was that which affirmed the unities. In his concurrence with the Classical idea of the purgative effect of pity and fear, Milton combined reactionary aesthetics with the scientific spirit of the recently formed Royal Society.

Nor is Nature wanting in her own effects to make good his assertion [Aristotle on catharsis]: for so, in Physic things of melancholic hue and quality are used against melancholy, sour against sour, salt to remove salt humours.

Dryden spoke against a delimiting conception of either the genres or the unities. Speaking in the guise of Neander in Of Dramatick Poesie, an Essay(1668), he said that it was

to the honour of our nation, that we have invented, increased, and perfected a more pleasant way of writing for the stage, than was ever known to the ancients or moderns of any nation, which is tragi-comedy. (see also  tragicomedy)

The French dramatists, he felt, through their observance of the unities of time and place, wrote plays characterized by a dearth of plot and narrowness of imagination. Racine's approach to the question of probability was turned completely around by Dryden, who asked:

How Many beautiful accidents might naturally happen in two or three days, which cannot arrive with any probability in the compass of twenty-four hours?

The definitive critique of Neoclassical restrictions was not formulated, however, until the following century, when it was made by Samuel Johnson and was, significantly, part of his 1765 preface to Shakespeare, the first major step in the long process of establishing Shakespeare as the preeminent tragic poet of post-Classical drama. On genre he wrote:

Shakespeare's plays are not in the rigorous and critical sense either tragedies or comedies, but compositions of a distinct kind; . . . expressing the course of the world, in which the loss of one is the gain of another; in which, at the same time, the reveller is hasting to his wine, and the mourner burying his friend . . . . That this is a practice contrary to the rules of criticism will be readily allowed; but there is always an appeal open from criticism to nature.

And on the unities:

The necessity of observing the unities of time and place arises from the supposed necessity of making the drama credible. [But] the objection arising from the impossibility of passing the first hour at Alexandria, and the next at Rome, supposes, that when the play opens, the spectator really imagines himself at Alexandria . . . Surely he that imagines this may imagine more.

Johnson's appeal to nature was the essence of subsequent Romantic criticism.

 

5.3.3.4 Romantic theories.

Lessing was the first important Romantic critic. He stated one of Romanticism's chief innovations in his Hamburg Dramaturgy(1767-69): (see also  German literature)

The names of princes and heroes can lend pomp and majesty to a play, but they contribute nothing to our emotion. The misfortune of those whose circumstances most resemble our own, must naturally penetrate most deeply into our hearts, and if we pity kings, we pity them as human beings, not as kings. (see also  domestic tragedy)

Within a generation, revolutions in Europe and America offered social expression of this literary precept, and a dramatic tradition dominant for 22 centuries was upturned. From the time of Aristotle, who thought that the tragic hero should be highly renowned and prosperous, the tragic hero had been an aristocrat, if not a man of royal blood. With the exception of their minor or peripheral characters, the tragic dramas of Athens, England, and France told nothing of the destinies of the mass of mankind. All this was now changed.

 

5.3.3.4.1 Coleridge

But it is not certain that what was good for the revolution was good for tragedy. Coleridge in his critical writings of 1808-18 said that:

there are two forms of disease most preclusive of tragic worth. The first [is] a sense and love of the ludicrous, and a diseased sensibility of the assimilating power . . . that in the boldest bursts of passion will lie in wait, or at once kindle into jest . . . . The second cause is matter of exultation to the philanthropist and philosopher, and of regret to the poet , . . . namely, the security, comparative equability, and ever-increasing sameness of human life.

In accord with this distaste for an excess of the mundane, Coleridge attacked the new German tragedies in which "the dramatist becomes a novelist in his directions to the actors, and degrades tragedy to pantomime." To describe, or rather indicate, what tragedy should ideally be, Coleridge said "it is not a copy of nature; but it is an imitation."

Coleridge's operative words and phrases in his discussions of tragedy were "innate," "from within," "implicit," "the being within," "the inmost heart," "our inward nature," "internal emotions," and "retired recesses." The new philosophical dispensation in Coleridge, like the new social dispensation in Lessing, reversed the old priorities; and where there were once princes there were now burghers, and where there were once the ordinances of God and the state there were now the dictates of the heart. By means of this reversal, Coleridge effected a reconciliation of the "tragedy of fate" and the "tragedy of character" in his description of the force of fate as merely the embodiment of an interior compulsion different in scale but not in kind from the interior compulsions of character. In Classical tragedy, he said the human "will" was "exhibited as struggling with fate, a great and beautiful instance and illustration of which is the Prometheus of Aeschylus; and the deepest effect is produced, when the fate is represented as a higher and intelligent will. . . ."

According to Coleridge, Shakespeare used the imaginative "variety" that characterizes man's inward nature in place of the mechanical regularity of the Neoclassical unities to produce plays that were "neither tragedies nor comedies, nor both in one, but a different genus, diverse in kind, not merely different in degree,--romantic dramas or dramatic romances." In his preoccupation with the mixture of genres and his distinction between the "mechanical" (Neoclassicism) and the "organic" (Shakespeare), Coleridge was influenced by Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature (delivered 1808-09, published 1809-11), by August Wilhelm von Schlegel, perhaps the most influential of German Romantic critics.

 

5.3.3.4.2 Schlegel.

Like Coleridge and most Romantic critics of tragedy, Schlegel found his champion in Shakespeare, and, also like them, he was preoccupied with the contrast between Classic and Romantic. Like Coleridge, Schlegel emphasized Shakespeare's inwardness, what Coleridge called his "implicit wisdom deeper even than our consciousness." It is in Shakespeare's most profound insights that Schlegel locates one of the principal distinctions between Classical and Shakespearean tragedy, in what he calls Shakespeare's "secret irony." The irony in Oedipus the King consists in the relation between the audience's knowledge of the protagonist's situation and his own ignorance of it. But Shakespeare's "readiness to remark the mind's fainter and involuntary utterances" is so great, says Schlegel, that "nobody ever painted so truthfully as he has done the facility of self-deception, the half self-conscious hypocrisy towards ourselves, with which even noble minds attempt to disguise the almost inevitable influence of selfish motives in human nature."

The irony Schlegel sees in Shakespeare's characterizations also extends to the whole of the action, as well as to the separate characters. In his discussion of it he suggests the reason for the difficulty of Shakespeare's plays and for the quarrelsome, irreconcilable "interpretations" among Shakespeare's commentators:

Most poets who portray human events in a narrative or dramatic form take themselves apart, and exact from their readers a blind approbation or condemnation of whatever side they choose to support or oppose . . . . When, however, by a dexterous manoeuvre, the poet allows us an occasional glance at the less brilliant reverse of the medal, then he makes, as it were, a sort of secret understanding with the select circle of the more intelligent of his readers or spectators; he shows them that he had previously seen and admitted the validity of their tacit objections; that he himself is not tied down to the represented subject but soars freely above it. . . .

In Greek tragedy, the commentary by the chorus was an explicit and objective fact of the drama itself. In the presentation of Shakespeare's plays, such a commentary is carried on in the separate minds of the spectators, where it is diffused, silent, and not entirely sure of itself. When the spectators speak their minds after the curtain falls, it is not surprising that they often disagree.

In Oedipus the King, which Aristotle cited as the model of Classical tragedy, the irony of the protagonist's situation is evident to the spectator. In Hamlet, however, according to the American philosopher George Santayana, writing in 1908, it is the secret ironies, half-lights, and self-contradictions that make it the central creation of Romantic tragedy. As has been noted, Coleridge objected to the dramatist's giving directions to the actors, but part of the price of not having them is to deny to the audience as well an explicit indication of the playwright's meaning.

 

5.3.3.4.3 Hegel

George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), the immensely influential German philospher, in his Aesthetik (1820-29), proposed that the sufferings of the tragic hero are merely a means of reconciling opposing moral claims. The operation is a success because of, not in spite of, the fact that the patient dies. According to Hegel's account of Greek tragedy, the conflict is not between good and evil but between goods that are each making too exclusive a claim. The heroes of ancient tragedy, by adhering to the one ethical system by which they molded their own personality, must come into conflict with the ethical claims of another. It is the moral one-sidedness of the tragic actor, not any negatively tragic fault in his morality or in the forces opposed to him, that proves his undoing, for both sides of the contradiction, if taken by themselves, are justified.

The nuclear Greek tragedy for Hegel is, understandably, Sophocles' Antigonewith its conflict between the valid claims of conscience (Antigone's obligation to give her brother a suitable burial) and law (King Creon's edict that enemies of the state should not be allowed burial). The two claims represent what Hegel regards as essentially concordant ethical claims. Antigone and Creon are, in this view, rather like pawns in the Hegelian dialectic--his theory that thought progresses from a thesis (i.e., an idea), through an antithesis (an idea opposing the original thesis), to a synthesis (a more comprehensive idea that embraces both the thesis and antithesis), which in turn becomes the thesis in a further progression. At the end of Antigone, something of the sense of mutually appeased, if not concordant, forces does obtain after Antigone's suicide and the destruction of Creon's family. Thus, in contrast to Aristotle's statement that the tragic actors should represent not an extreme of good or evil but something between, Hegel would have them too good to live; that is, too extreme an embodiment of a particular good to survive in the world. He also tends to dismiss other traditional categories of tragic theory. For instance, he prefers his own kind of catharsis to Aristotle's--the feeling of reconciliation.

Hegel's emphasis on the correction of moral imbalances in tragedy is reminiscent of the "poetic justice" of Neoclassical theory, with its similar dialectic of crime and punishment. He sounds remarkably like Racine when he claims that, in the tragic denouement, the necessity of all that has been experienced by particular individuals is seen to be in complete accord with reason and is harmonized on a true ethical basis. But where the Neoclassicists were preoccupied with the unities of time and place, Hegel's concerns, like those of other Romantics, are inward. For him, the final issue of tragedy is not the misfortune and suffering of the tragic antagonists but rather the satisfaction of spirit arising from "reconciliation." Thus, the workings of the spirit, in Hegel's view, are subject to the rationalistic universal laws.

Hegel's system is not applicable to Shakespearean or Romantic tragedy. Such Shakespearean heroes as Macbeth, Richard III, and Mark Antony cannot be regarded as embodiments of any transcendent good. They behave as they do, says Hegel, now speaking outside of his scheme of tragedy, simply because they are the kind of men they are. In a statement pointing up the essence of uninhibited romantic lust and willfulness Hegel said: "it is the inner experience of their heart and individual emotion, or the particular qualities of their personality, which insist on satisfaction."

 

5.3.3.4.4 Schopenhauer and Nietzsche.

The traditional categories of tragedy are nearly destroyed in the deepened subjectivities of Romanticism of the 19th-century German philosophers, Arthur Schopenhauer and his disciple Friedrich Nietzsche. In Schopenhauer's Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung (1819; The World as Will and Idea), much more than the social or ethical order is upturned. In place of God, the good, reason, soul, or heart, Schopenhauer installs the will, as reality's true inner nature, the metaphysical to everything physical in the world. In Schopenhauer, there is no question of a Hegelian struggle to achieve a more comprehensive good. There is rather the strife of will with itself, manifested by fate in the form of chance and error and by the tragic personages themselves. Both fate and men represent one and the same will, which lives and appears in them all. Its individual manifestations, however, in the form of such phenomena as chances, errors, or men, fight against and destroy each other.

Schopenhauer accordingly rejects the idea of poetic justice: "the demand for so-called poetical justice rests on entire misconception of the nature of tragedy, and, indeed, of the nature of the world itself . . . . The true sense of tragedy is the deeper insight, that it is not his own individual sins that the hero atones for, but original sin, i.e., the crime of existence itself. . . ." Schopenhauer distinguishes three types of tragic representation: (1) "by means of a character of extraordinary wickedness . . . who becomes the author of the misfortune"; (2) "blind fate--i.e., chance and error" (such as the title characters in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and "most of the tragedies of the ancients"); and (3) when "characters of ordinary morality . . . are so situated with regard to each other that their position compels them, knowingly and with their eyes open, to do each other the greatest injury, without any one of them being entirely in the wrong" (such as, "to a certain extent," Hamlet).

This last kind of tragedy seems to Schopenhauer far to surpass the other two. His reason, almost too grim to record, is that it provides the widest possible play to the destructive manifestations of the will. It brings tragedy, so to speak, closest to home.

Schopenhauer finds tragedy to be the summit of poetical art, because of the greatness of its effect and the difficulty of its achievement. According to Schopenhauer, the egoism of the protagonist is purified by suffering almost to the purity of nihilism. His personal motives become dispersed as his insight into them grows; "the complete knowledge of the nature of the world, which has a quieting effect on the will, produces resignation, the surrender not merely of life, but of the very will to live."

Schopenhauer's description has limited application to tragic denouements in general. In the case of his own archetypal hero, the hero's end seems merely the mirror image of his career, an oblivion of resignation or death that follows an oblivion of violence. Instead of a dialogue between higher and lower worlds of morality or feeling (which take place even in Shakespeare's darkest plays), Schopenhauer posits a succession of states as helpless in knowledge as in blindness. His "will" becomes a synonym for all that is possessed and necessity-ridden.

Nietzsche's Geburt der Tragödie aus dem Geiste der Musik (1872) was deeply influenced by Schopenhauer. The two elements of tragedy, says Nietzsche, are the Apollonian (related to the Greek god Apollo, here used as a symbol of measured restraint) and the Dionysian (from Dionysus, the Greek god of ecstasy). His conception of the Apollonian is the equivalent of what Schopenhauer called the individual phenomenon--the particular chance, error, or man, the individuality of which is merely a mask for the essential truth of reality which it conceals. The Dionysian element is a sense of universal reality, which, according to Schopenhauer, is experienced after the loss of individual egoism. The "Dionysian ecstasy," as defined by Nietzsche, is experienced "not as individuals but as the one living being, with whose creative joy we are united." (see also  Apollonian-Dionysian dichotomy)

Nietzsche dismisses out of hand one of the most venerable features of the criticism of tragedy, the attempt to reconcile the claims of ethics and art. He says that the events of a tragedy are "supposed" to discharge pity and fear and are "supposed" to elevate and inspire by the triumph of noble principles at the sacrifice of the hero. But art, he says, must demand purity within its own sphere. To explain tragic myth, the first requirement is to seek the pleasure that is peculiar to it in the purely aesthetic sphere, without bringing in pity, fear, or the morally sublime.

The essence of this specifically aesthetic tragic effect is that it both reveals and conceals, causing both pain and joy. The drama's exhibition of the phenomena of suffering individuals (Apollonian elements) forces upon the audience "the struggle, the pain, the destruction of phenomena," which in turn communicates "the exuberant fertility of the universal." The spectators then "become, as it were, one with the infinite primordial joy in existence, and . . . we anticipate, in Dionysian ecstasy, the indestructibility and eternity of this joy." Thus, he says, there is a desire "to see tragedy and at the same time to get beyond all seeing . . . to hear and at the same time long to get beyond all hearing."

The inspired force of Nietzsche's vision is mingled with a sense of nihilism:

"only after the spirit of science has been pursued to its limits, . . . may we hope for a rebirth of tragedy . . . I understand by the spirit of science the faith that first came to light in the person of Socrates--the faith in the explicability of nature and in knowledge as a panacea."

Nietzsche would replace the spirit of science with a conception of existence and the world as an aesthetic phenomenon and justified only as such. Tragedy would enjoy a prominent propagandistic place. It is "precisely the tragic myth that has to convince us that even the ugly and disharmonic are part of an artistic game that the will in the eternal amplitude of its pleasure plays with itself." And, consummately: "we have art in order that we may not perish through truth."

 

5.3.3.4.5 Tragedy in music.

Musical dissonance was Nietzsche's model for the double effect of tragedy. The first edition of his book was titled The Birth of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music, another influence from Schopenhauer, for whom music differed from all the other arts in that it is not a copy of a phenomenon but the direct copy of the will itself. He even called the world "embodied music , . . . embodied will." Nietzsche's theorizing on the relation of the tragic theme to art forms other than the drama was in fact confirmed in such operas as Mussorgsky's version of Pushkin's tragedy Boris Godunov, Verdi's of Macbeth and Othello, and Gounod's Faust. In contrast to these resettings of received forms, Wagner, Verdi, and Bizet achieved a new kind of tragic power for Romanticism in the theme of the operatic love-death in, respectively, Tristan and Isolde, Aida, and Carmen. Thus, the previous progression of the genre from tragedy to tragicomedy to romantic tragedy continued to a literary-musical embodiment of what Nietzsche called "tragic dithyrambs." (see also  music, history of)

An earlier prophecy than Nietzsche's regarding tragedy and opera was made by the German poet Friedrich von Schiller in a letter of 1797 to Goethe:

I have always trusted that out of opera, as out of the choruses of the ancient festival of Bacchus, tragedy would liberate itself and develop in a nobler form. In opera, servile imitation of nature is dispensed with . . . here is . . . the avenue by which the ideal can steal its way back into the theatre.

 

5.3.3.5 20th-century critical theory.

In the 20th century, discussion of tragedy was sporadic until the aftermath of World War II. Then it enjoyed new vigour, perhaps to compensate for, or help explain, the dearth of genuine tragic literature, either in the novel or in the theatre. In the 1950s and 1960s countless full-length studies, articles, and monographs variously sought the essence, the vision, the view of life, or the spirit of tragedy out of a concern for the vital culture loss were the death of tragedy to become a reality. They also attempted to mediate the meaning of tragedy to a public that was denied its reality, save in revivals or an occasional approximation. Since the Romantic critics first ventured beyond the Aristotelean categories to consider tragedy, or the tragic, as a sense of life, there was an increasing tendency to regard tragedy not merely as drama but as a philosophical form. It is noteworthy that the Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno's influential book, The Tragic Sense of Life (1921), barely mentions the formal drama.

From the time of Aristotle, tragedy has achieved importance primarily as a medium of self-discovery--the discovery of man's place in the universe and in society. That is the main concern of Aristotle in his statements about reversal, recognition, and catharsis, though it remained for the Romantic critics to point it out. The loss of this concern in the facile plays of the 19th and 20th centuries resulted in the reduction of tragic mystery to confused sentimentalism. Critics of the 20th century, being less certain even than Schopenhauer or Nietzsche of what man's place in the scheme of things may be, experimented with a variety of critical approaches, just as contemporary dramatists experimented with various "theatres." Although these critics lacked the philosophical certainties of earlier theorists, they had a richer variety of cultures and genres to instruct them. The hope of both critics and dramatists was that this multiplicity would produce not mere impressionism or haphazard eclecticism but new form and new meaning.

¡¡

¡¡


[ Ȩ ] [ À§·Î ] [ The Scope of Literature ] [ Poetry ] [ Narrative Fiction ] [ Drama ] [ Other Genres ] [ Children's Literature ] [ Bibliography ]


¡¡
¡¡
 

 °Ô½ÃÆÇ  °Ë»ö  ÀÚ·á½Ç  »çÀÌÆ®¸Ê  ¿¹¼ö¿Í³ª?

[ µÚ·Î ] [ Ȩ ] [ À§·Î ] [ ´ÙÀ½ ]

¡¡
 

Jesusi.com Homepage



This page was last modified 2001/09/12