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(Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Chapter one Tragedy and Poetry 1 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Since its inception in ancient Greece two millennia and a half ago, tragedy has never faded out. It is true that there were periods when other forms of entertainment or other types of drama eclipsed tragedy, but it has never failed to maintain the interest of both dramatists and philosophers. It is noteworthy that tragedy has often been written in verse; the use of prose as the medium of tragedy is only a recent phenomenon. This chapter is a survey of the history of tragedy from its birth in Athens twenty-five centuries ago up to the first half of the twentieth century. This chapter also hopes to explore some basic theories of tragedy from Aristotle to Nietzsche. Needless to say, the views of the twentieth century upholders of poetic drama, e.g T.S Eliot and Maxwell Anderson will be examend. If we go back in history we can see that tragedy witnessed four great periods; fifth century in ancient Greece; The Elizabethan and Jacobean period in England; the seventeenth century in France; and the second half of the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century in Europe and America. 2 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER The word tragedy refers to a work of art that probes with high seriousness questions concerning the role of man in the world. The ancient Greeks first used the word in the fifth century B.C to describe a certain type of play which used to be presented in ceremonies in Greece. The government paid for these dramas which were attended by the whole city. The topics of the performances show that they focused more on the religious aspect of the celebrations than on entertainment. There were altars to the gods with the presence of priests, and the subjects of tragedies deal with the failures of the heroes of legend, religious myth and history. Works of art in this period of time relied heavily on the works of Homer and common knowledge in the Greek communities (" Tragedy " www.britannica.com, 12.Sep.2012). Tragedy can transform experience and history into meaning, and the shock of significance may have the power to transform us. Tragedy lies in our expectation that knowledge might emerge out of the human suffering. 3 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER In Oresteia, Aeschylus presented a trilogy like Oedipus' trilogy. The three-act drama dealt with sin, revenge, and reconciliation, Prometheus's punishment is the predictable consequence of defying the supreme deity. All of the elements of tragedy, all of its cruelty, loss, and suffering are presented in the works of Homer and the ancient myths but were dealt with as absolutes-self sufficient and without the questioning spirit that was necessary to elevate them to the level of tragedy (Bushnell 11). Aeschylus and his fellow tragedians made great achievements in handling the nature of existence. The Athenian dramatists maintained a vivid sense of the reality of their character's knowledge. In the fifth century BC, they learned from their tragedies the possibilities and limitations of the spirit. Prometheus's work can be compared to the Bible in its structure and preoccupation with the problem of suffering due to unfair deity. Aeschylus realized that evil is inevitable, loss is irreversible and suffering is irretrievable. To the Greeks, when the tragic hero suffers, it is a sign of learning about his mistakes. Suffering to Aeschylus is a means of acquiring knowledge. As a matter of fact, his tragedies set new tones in tragedy (Bushnell 12). 4 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Sophocles' Oedipus the King can be considered an icon in his career. In his masterpiece, Sophocles provided to us all the basics of tragedy. It is the basis and the ground floor for Greek tragedies, no other play can be compared to it. In Sophocles' plays, the chorus is less important if we compare him to other Greek writers. The course of action is fast and highly jointed; the dialogue is crisper, more disconnected and shows the real meaning of the play. In Oedipus Rex, tragic hero can be a man for whom freedom of the self is a necessity. Tragedy must keep a balance between the optimisms of religion or philosophy or any other beliefs that result to explain the secrets of existence. On the other hand, pessimism would turn down the human experience as worthless and useless (Bushnell 13). Greek tragedies are timeless. They were performed in a ritual context. Also, they were shaped by assumptions other than those who produced them. If Greek tragedy had been the cultural artifact of a society, it would have been classified; I would say a type of performance which was ritual. 5 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER The tragedies of Euripides examine in great detail the breaks of human lives under the pressures that gods intentionally place on them. However, if the gods had nothing to do with the problems of humans they leave the human struggles with himself causing his individual breaks. No Euripidean hero is ever compared to Sophocles' Oedipus. In Medea, Medea's revenge on Jason is unfair by killing their children and poisoning his second wife's dress to kill her and this raises the question of gods. Gods in Euripidean plays, in short, cannot be appealed to in the name of justice. Euripides' harmony towards moral tolerance leaves the audience in a moment of disability to choose the right thing from the wrong one. So the acts of gods in the Greek writers Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides do differ from one another. In Aeschylus' plays, the gods are there and take action. In Eumenides, the goddess Athena is helping to solve the problems of justice. In Sophocles' plays, the gods are far and their moral judgment is not questioned. In Oedipus Rex, Oedipus faces his vital ending without any justice act of the gods. In Euripides, the gods are destructive, breaking their impulsive wills on a vulnerable character (" Tragedy " www.britannica.com, 17.Sep.2012). 6 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Aristotle's ideas about tragedy are mentioned in his famous book of literary discourse titled Poetics. Aristotle has discussed in detail the structure, purpose, and intended effect of tragedy in his book. His ideas have been adopted, expanded, and discussed for several centuries until now. In chapter 6 Aristotle defines tragedy as follows: A tragedy is the imitation of an action that is serious, and also as having magnitude, complete in itself in language with pleasurable accessories, each kind brought in separately in the parts of the work; in a dramatic, not in a narrative form: with incidents arousing pity and fear; wherewith to accomplish its catharisis of such emotions (ch.6, 1449b24-8). As Bushnell points out, "Aristotle gives a fuller account of this wholeness by differentiating the beginning, middle and end of the tragic action in terms of causality: the beginning is not caused by anything that comes before; the middle is caused by the beginning and causes the end; the end is caused by the beginning and middle but causes nothing 7 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER further. To this wholeness and seriousness Aristotle adds magnitude which he defines as the scope required for a probable or necessary succession of events which produce a transformation either from affliction to prosperity"(Bushnell43). This error of judgment is known as hamartia. The role of the hamartia in tragedy comes not from its moral status but from the inevitability of its consequences. The fall of the hero is not pure loss. Though it arouses solemn emotions, tragedy does not leave its audience in a state of depression; a plot should be made of a hero going from happiness to misery. The misery should be the result of some hamartia, or error, on the part of the hero. (Bushnell 46). Aristotle argues that one of the functions of tragedy is to arouse the unhealthy emotions of pity and fear through catharsis. "Catharsis is a term in dramatic art that describes the effect of tragedy or comedy and quite possibly other artistic forms principally on the audience although some have speculated on characters in the drama as well. Nowhere does Aristotle explain the meaning of "catharsis", as he is using that term in the definition of tragedy in the Poetics, for this reason a number of diverse interpretations of the meaning of this term have arisen" ( D.W. Lucas 24). 8 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER The second great period of tragedy was during The English Renaissance drama. A distinctly English form of tragedy began with the Elizabethans. The translation of Seneca, and the reading of Aristotle's Poetics were major influences. Many critics and playwrights, such as Ben Jonson, insisted on observing the classical unities of action, time and place i.e., the action should be one whole and take place in one day and in one place (" Tragedy " www.britannica.com, 24.Sep.2012). Christopher Marlowe was the first English dramatist of the traditions of the Greeks. His tragedy Tamburlaine is the most famous and significant of his tragedies. "The qualities of Tamburlaine defined as tragic are primarily stylistic: both metrical and rhetorical (Bushnell 301)". '' Marlowe intended his story to end, not with Tamburlaine's fall but with his violent subjection of the kings of Arabia and his marriage to the fair Zenocrate (Bushnell 302)''. 9 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Nevertheless, it was romantic tragedy, which Shakespeare wrote in Richard II, Macbeth, Hamlet, and King Lear, which succeeded. Romantic tragedy ignored the unities as in the use of subplots, mixing tragedy and comedy, and emphasizing action, spectacle, and increasing sensation. Shakespeare violated the unities in these ways and also in mixing poetry and prose and using the device of a play-within-a play, as in Hamlet. The Elizabethans acted on stage the violence that the Greek dramatists reported. Titus Andronicus is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. It is a revenge play in which fourteen people died. Some of the killings were performed on the stage. Elizabethan and later Jacobean playwrights had a diverse audience to please, ranging from Queen Elizabeth and King James I and their courtiers to the lowest classes ("Tragedy" www.britannica.com, 19.Sep.2012). William Shakespeare related his early writings to the current situation in England. His plays were written to meet the interest of James I of Scotland, who was later crowned as James I the king of England. Shakespeare's plays meet true Elizabethan conventions. In classical tragedy; the protagonist is always a man or woman of 10 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER magnificence. This is also true in Elizabethan tragedy, which, however, depends on shock and violence for much of its consequence (Nda 14). In Macbeth, William Shakespeare conforms to the classical concept that the tragic action should be built around royalty. Macbeth is a Scottish general and later becomes the king of England. In Macbeth, we find ourselves let in on the plot to murder Duncan and we hear the prophecies that motivate Macbeth. Such characterization of the central figures is well suited to expressing tragedy. The hero is like most other traditional works and not mere characters and individuals, butrepresentative symbols of an entire cultural entity. Macbeth is caught in a series of actions which eventually lead to his destruction. The influence of witches and the persuasion of Lady Macbeth lead the hero to commit regicide, and from this point there is no hindrance to his tumbling to the final fall. The tragic hero is presented as brave and courageous, even in the face of death. He seems to accept responsibility for what has befallen him (Nda13-14). 11 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER "For a span of just over fifty years, two dramatists dominated the stage of French classical tragedy. Pierre Corneille and Jean Racine while espousing radically different views of the tragic genre appeared to their contemporaries and to succeeding generations intimately locked in artistic rivalry (Bushnell 393)". This competition opposed two ethical views; one political the other personal. In 1634, Pierre Corneille wrote his first tragedy Mêdée. He chose his first tragedy to enter the door of tragedy through myth. The heart of this tragedy is sexual desire, jealousy and revenge. Corneille chose to follow Seneca's depiction of the passions, fears and murderous powers of a woman (Bushnell 394). In this he follows the theatrical style which took over the Parisian stage in the first third of the century. Drama at this period was known for the twisted plots, dramatic misprisions and plot reversal at the end. Jean Racine is one of the three greatest French dramatists of the seventeenth century, the other two being Hardy and Corneille. "Racinian tragedy is always a family affair (Bushnell 404)". 12 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER What this means is that in Corneille's tragedy we see a separation between family and state. On the other hand in Racine's tragedy we see that there is no separation between family and state (Bushnell404). Corneille applies Aristotle's three unities of time, place and action limits the action of his plays is to one day. There is no change of scene; there is neither comedy nor relief. The nature of the process is sharp and powerful. Racine's conception of character and the analysis of them, suggested the presence of Sophoclean heroic humanism. French playwrights developed the so-called the linking up of scenes (''Tragedy'' www.britannica.com, 1.Oct.2012). The sunrise of the 19th century was lighted up by the last flickers of the torch of the French revolution; and its earlier years were filled with the echoing cannonade of the Napoleonic occupations. It was not until after the battle of Waterloo that the battle-field of Europe became only a parade-ground; and this is perhaps one reason why there was a dearth of dramatic literature in the first quarter of the century and why no dramatist of prominence flourished (Matthews 269). 13 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER All the way through Europe during the first years of the century the acted drama was for the most part unliterary and the so-called literary drama was apparently unacceptable, proving itself pitiably ineffective whenever it was likely to be put on the stage. In Germany the more popular plays were either sentimental or melodramatic; and every now and then they were both. In England the more serious dramas were repeatedly adapted or imitated from the German, while the comic plays like those of the younger Colman were often little better than helterskelter patchworks of exaggerated incident and contorted caricature. In France tragedy was being squeezed the life out of in the tightening bonds forced by the classicist rules; and comedy was panting vainly for a larger freedom of theme and of treatment (Matthews 269). " It is particularly important that the theatre, the most transient of all the arts, which leaves nothing behind but a few inadequate photographs and vague memories, be caught in print if it makes claim to historical significance and progressive development. For that reason the theoretical discoveries that have been made deserve to be recorded just as much as the facts and events (Drain 6)." 14 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER The twentieth century describes a period of great change within the theatrical culture of the 20th century. There was an extensive challenge to long established rules surrounding theatrical illustration; resulting in the growth of lots of new forms of theatre, including modernism, expressionism, political theater and other forms of experimental theatre, as well as the continuing development of already established theatrical norms like naturalism and realism. All through the century, the artistic reputation of theatre improved after being derided throughout the 19th century. However, the growth of other media, especially film, has resulted in a diminished role within culture at large. In the light of this change, theatrical artists have been forced to seek new ways to engage with society (Drain 16). The drama of the modern United States ahead of World War I definitely was not considered a modern drama. In the years prior to the little theatre movement gave rise to a new age of American playwrights who experimented with European realisms and anti-realisms, and the new stagecraft made metaphoric space of theatre production, American drama existed much as it had since the Civil War. Literary and theatrical modernism in Europe was a reaction to the shifting situations of modern life (Bryan 25). 15 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Although the American social and political landscape was transformed by the same cultural forces, the American drama of the twentieth century revealed instead a theatrical business structure that resisted new forms and a literary culture that produced few new works of drama (Bryan 25). The four great critics who have discussed tragedy are Hegel, Nietzsche, T.S. Eliot and Miller respectively. Hegel's theory of tragedy is based on two things; the notion of conflict and the possibility of its resolution. Hegel made a big shift in the terms of thought about tragedy. It was neither a simple dramatic genre anymore nor a kind of story to tell. Tragedy to Hegel was more than the number of plays by Sophocles, Shakespeare, Corneille and Schiller. It was an idea to which these plays were more or less adequate embodiments (Poole58). The idea was more or less philosophical, ethical and theological (Poole59). To Hegel, tragedy was a way of representing the conflicts suffered by spirit in its descent into the world; spirit becomes dispersed into specific forms and figures that represent one aspect of it (Poole59). 16 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Tragedy represents the conflict not of right against wrong which is melodrama or justice but of right against right (Poole52). For Hegel, it is important that this conflict is a necessary stage, no matter how painful, in the cause of historical progress. Hegel went further to acknowledge the conflict at the heart of tragedy that it was extremely purposive (Poole59). Friedrich Nietzsche gave a new life to the modern reception of tragedy mainly in its Greek form. Tragedy with Nietzsche became a very powerful label. It also became relevant, a kind of primordial experience that brought one back to the depths of the human heart but to the roots of human history and human existence. Nietzsche's thinking about tragedy rephrases a long-standing tradition which looked to Greece whenever tragedy came to mind. Tragedy for Nietzsche is the single pivot around which antiquity, indeed world history turns everything that leads up to its development. The birth of tragedy causes a sensation. The birth of tragedy to Nietzsche's life that his profile and identity as a thinker and a cultural force couldn’t help but be proud up with his views on tragedy, and consequently with the way he would be remembered, whether in terms of his career or in terms of his thinking (Bushnell 68). 17 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER The birth of tragedy typifies Nietzsche's presentational styles, both early and late not least because it is an object more than a stable text. At the heart of the birth of tragedy lies the opposition between the Greek gods, Apollo and Dionysus who in turn stand for two antagonistic aesthetic principles that are nonetheless complementary and equally vital to the production of the highest are. Apollo represents the realm of clear and- luminous appearances, dreams, harmless deception and traits that are typically Hellenic and classic. On the other hand, Dionysus represents hidden metaphysical depths, disturbing realities, intoxication and traits that are exotic and unclassical (Bushnell 69). Nietzsche suggests that the people of ancient Greece were strangely sensitive and susceptible to suffering. The primal unity of the Dionysian brings us into direct apprehension of the suffering that lies at the heart of all life. By contrast, the Apollonian is associated with images and dreams, and hence with the appearances. Greek art is so beautiful precisely because the Greeks depended heavily on the appearances generated by images and dreams to shield themselves from the reality of suffering (Poole64). 18 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Nietzsche considers the Greek tragedies of Aeschylus and Sophocles to be among the humankind's accomplishments, achieve their sublime effects by taming Dionysian passions by means of the Apollonian. Greek tragedy evolved out of religious rituals featuring a chorus of singers and dancers, and it achieved its distinctive shape when two or more actors stood apart from the chorus as tragic actors. By witnessing the fall of a tragic hero, we witness the death of individual who is absorbed back into the Dionysian primal unity (Poole64). T.S. Elliot is a very critical writer. He has a tendency to pick things apart and give you every explanation he can to help you to understand exactly what he wants you to know in his work. The Possibility Of A Poetic Drama is a classic T.S. Elliot. He is picking apart the world of writing and whether or not it is society that wants certain types of drama or whether it is the writing community that cannot write them. Certainly, he feels that it is not the writers who cannot seem to write them or lack the talent but it is society uttering what they desire in drama. This brings to mind the age old question of supply and demand. If society wants a poetic drama, he feels that someone out there should be able to write it. This whole piece goes through the history of writing 19 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER through different eras of time and how society had affected who was a great writer and who wasn't. Whether it is comedy, drama or not; it will be the people who read it or see it that will decide either it is great at time or not. He is only trying to establish when poetic drama may become popular. I believe this to be true of any writing. There is always a place and a time that it will become popular, but that does not mean that if it is not popular now that it should not be written. It may only become popular after it has been published and one person begins to like to like and spreads the word. Society does dictate what is popular at the time, but as society changes, so does popularity. T.S. Elliot voices that well in this piece and I would expect no less from him ("Tragedy" www.britannica.com, 1.Jan.2013). The term poetic drama became popular during the middle of the twentieth century. It was T.S. Eliot who revived this term as a reaction to the drama of ideas popularized by Galsworthy and G. B. Shaw under the influence of Ibsen. Even Shaw has written ‘The Quintessence of Ibsen's’, in which he gave his manifesto and showed the influence of Ibsen. As a critic T. S. Eliot has written essays like ‘Poetry and Drama’ and ‘Possibility of Poetic Drama’ and so on. In ‘Poetry and Drama’ he points out that 20 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER poetry and drama are inseparable from each other. Poetry mirrors the heart of the person which the reader cannot conceal. Poetic Drama, according to T. S. Eliot, has far reaching effects as it affects the emotions of person directly as a practitioner of poetic drama ("Tragedy" www.britannica.com, 1.Jan.2013). Arthur Miller states in his essay, Tragedy and the Common Man that we are often held to be below tragedy or tragedy below us; tragedy is fit only for the highly placed and where this admission is not made in so many words it is most often implied. However, Miller believes the common man is as apt a subject for tragedy in its highest sense as kings were. It is this belief that causes Miller to use a common man, Willie Loman as the subject of his tragedy, Death of a Salesman. Miller redefines the tragic hero to fit a more modern age, and the product of this redefinition is Willie. Miller states, the tragic feeling is evoked in us when we are in the presence of a character that is ready to lay down his life to secure one thing his sense of personal dignity (Bushnell 500). 21 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Willie is no exception. Willie's sense of personal dignity is primarily found in his family, most notably his son Biff. Willie transfers his dreams of being great onto Biff and, when Biff is a failure in the world, these dreams affect Willie's self-image and sense of personal dignity. To regain this personal dignity, Willie must make Biff great. In the end, it is the love for his son and the belief that his insurance money will make Biff magnificent that give him the needed excuse and cause him to end his life (Bushnell 501). Tragedy, then, is the consequence of a man's total compulsion to evaluate himself justly. It is the nature of man to make evaluations of himself based upon his peers. Willie's peer with whom he evaluates himself is Charley. Willie and Charley are about the same age; their children grew up together, and have been friends for many years. Charley has achieved what Willie has dreamed of for so long. Charley's son is a successful lawyer, whereas Biff is a loafer. Charley is successful in business, whereas Willie has washed out. As mentioned before, for Willie to be great, Biff must be great. Willie has failed his job in making Biff better than Charley's son; therefore he fails his evaluations of himself (Bushnell 501). 22 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER The flaw is really nothing but his inherent unwillingness to remain passive in the face of what he conceives to be a challenge to his dignity. Willie's dignity is also challenged by his lack of success in business and in the raising of his son. Willie's unwillingness to remain passive manifests itself in his desire to kill himself. Willie believes that once he kills himself his son will be great, therefore so will he. His refusal to remain passive makes him modern tragic hero according to Miller's redefinition (Bushnell 502). Success, wrote Maxwell Anderson, in an artistic field cannot be achieved without a definition of the artist’s faith … (Whatever Hope 18). Anderson had unconventional definitions of both faith and religion. His sacred texts were those of Socrates, Aristotle, Sherwood, and Connelly; his temple was the theatre building; and the followers of his religion were those audience members attending the theatre in support of the arts and participating in what Anderson called the “Exaltation of the spirit of man” (Broadway 28). 23 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Anderson determined, through study of previous theatrical successes of the Greeks and Shakespeare, that the purpose of theatre was to find and hold up to our regard, what is admirable in the human race (27). To ensure success of his plays, Anderson studied playwrights who created plays which contain subjects that are everlasting because they present what is admirable to the human race (Broadway 27). Anderson states that the essence of tragedy means a victory taken from defeat at the moment when a person is faced with annihilation. At the end of a tragedy, the hero reaches a spiritual enlightenment and to his death. In The Essence of Tragedy he defines a play as being practically always an effort to recapture for the theatre the artist's vision. The reader or the audience has the responsibility, therefore, for figuring out the meaning of the drama (Anderson 5). Tragedy and poetry may not be distinguished as if they were two different things. Some dramatic works are also poetic works. The whole corpus of French Classical drama is in rhymed couplets. And of course, William Shakespeare, the greatest dramatist in the English language and perhaps in any language, wrote his plays completely in verse, apart from some occasional, brief passages of prose. 24 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER Maxwell Anderson also states that a play should be written to lead up to and far away from a central crisis, and this crisis is made in a discovery by the main character which is under an ineradicable effect on his thought, emotion and completely changes his course of action. Anderson wrote that unless the playwright and his play have a dream or a conviction and unless the playwright can defend that conviction against death and hell the play isn’t worth producing (Keeping 76). Anderson reached the most convincing expression for his tragic view in a play which is not set in historical situations but in the conditions of the thirties in Winterset (1935). Even for a play of contemporary significance, Anderson preferred verse as the vehicle, because he held the view that prose is the language of information and poetry the language of emotion and that the best prose in the world is inferior to the poetry in the theatre (Bushnell 501). 25 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER He had arrived at certain ethical conclusions, for example, the view that men who are fed by their government will soon be driven down to the status of slaves or just cattle, which he found were contrary to contemporary practices. Like all other serious dramatists, he believed that the theatre is a serious religious institution devoted entirely to the exaltation of the spirit of man. The spiritual reformation of man must be the actual goal of the poetic tragedy. If man’s ultimate moral goal is to become more god-like, then men must continually choose the path in life which they believe will confirm the success of good. Excellence on the stage, therefore, is a moral excellence of a character. The plight of the character involves a continuing fight, on the part of the tragic hero, to better himself; however, this plight is of no interest unless “his character is somehow tried in the fire, and unless he comes out of his trial a better man (Off Broadway 26). To conclude, this was the main important periods and the main figures in each period. And in the next chapter, I will deal in details about tragedy to Maxwell Anderson keeping in mind his play "Winterset". 26 (Tragedy and Poetry) ABDULAZIZ ALBASHEER 27