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Download Detailed Course Outline - C 10 Plays
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Fall Term – Room A100 Friday, Sept 09 – Friday, Nov 11, 2016 Morning – 9:50-11:50 COURSE C Co-chairs: Berit Dullerud and Fran Sayers Course Director: Dr. Philippa Sheppard teaches Modern and Renaissance Drama at the University of Toronto. TEN PLAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD Opening with the ancient Greeks and travelling through the history of drama to the present day, this course will provide a survey of theatrical development. Each class will provide background on the playwrights’ lives and revelations about the plays’ commentary on human society. Each period of drama will be introduced with a brief description of performance conditions and prevailing schools of thought. Then we will delve deeply into one of the best representatives of the era’s playwriting. The lectures will be illustrated with stills and with clips from filmed performances. 1 Sept 09 The Ancient Greeks and Romans: Sophocles’s Oedipus Rex Using this seminal work as our foundation, we will explore the conventions associated with the dramatic arts in the time that gave birth to Western drama. This play by Sophocles has become the most cited of any in the Western canon, and formed the basis for Freud’s Oedipus Complex. It examines our subconscious desires and our confrontation with the limitations of human power in the face of what has variously been termed: fortune, fate, Providence, destiny or luck. 2 Sept 16 Early Renaissance Drama: Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus We leap from the inception of Western drama to its greatest flowering – the Renaissance. Marlowe’s play about a man in the throes of psychomachia provides the perfect bridge between the medieval and early modern periods. Faustus is essentially a Renaissance man – brilliant, sceptical and ambitious. Yet he operates in a medieval world in which visible angels and devils vie for his soul. A descendant of the protagonists of the great Greek tragedies, Faustus is undone by his flaw of hamartia – pride. 3 Sept 23 The Golden Age of Theatre: William Shakespeare’s Hamlet Benefitting from the path blazed by Marlowe, Shakespeare honed his craft until he was able to compose a play that has become iconic in Western civilization. Like Faustus, Hamlet is a man tortured by his conscience. No conventional avenger, Hamlet is nevertheless set on a vengeful quest by his father’s ghost. This confrontation with mortality leads Hamlet to ask many of the profound questions about our place in the universe. 4 Sept 30 The Jacobean Masque: Shakespeare’s The Tempest Shakespeare’s other famous contemporary, Ben Jonson, influenced the bard’s move towards a more courtly form of drama that suited the indoor theatre recently purchased by his company: Blackfriars. Highlighting music, dance and spectacle, the new drama in Shakespeare’s hands nevertheless addresses the key issues of the age: the ethics of colonialism, the components of good leadership and the power of art. Rev 0 2016/02/23 Page 1 of 2 5 Oct 7 Restoration Drama: Aphra Ben’s The Rover After the Civil War in England, when the Puritans closed all the theatres, the Restoration of the monarchy meant that a new kind of drama emerged, one that celebrated human sexuality as if to spite the Puritans. Women trod the boards for the first time and were also emerging as writers. Aphra Ben is often named the first female English playwright. The heroine of her play voices some lines that seem incredibly modern and proto-feminist. Like most Restoration plays, The Rover is characterized by a rollicking plot and an effervescent wit. 6 Oct 14 Naturalism and the Birth of Feminism: Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House With advances in the sciences helmed by pioneers like Charles Darwin, artists were driven to investigate human nature in a more methodical fashion. Emile Zola published an essay on the need for greater naturalism in the arts, basing character and plot on new learning about heredity and environment. The Norwegian playwright Ibsen was a forerunner in implementing these ideas on the stage. He also exposed the oppressiveness of 19th century social conventions, particularly on women. 7 Oct 21 The Emergence of the Modern Age: Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan In the aftermath of the Great War, every commonly held assumption came under question. Shaw became the master of the thesis drama, in which lively dialectic presents at least two contrasting views on an issue for the audience to consider. In Saint Joan, considered by many to be Shaw’s greatest work, the playwright examines nationhood, genius, war and religion, among other themes. He picks up where Ibsen left off in exploring women’s rights. 8 Oct 28 The Myth of the American Drama: Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun Following the Second World War, the United States enjoyed a period of unprecedented prosperity. Some groups, however, did not share in the fulfillment of the American Dream, among them, many African Americans. Hansberry exposes the racial prejudice that prevailed in the United States on a micro as well as a macro level, zeroing in on the social forces that attempt to stop a hard-working family from escaping the ghetto. She celebrates the distinct culture of African Americans in the dialogue and spectacle of the play. 9 Nov 4 The Theatre of the Absurd: Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot The huge death toll of the two world wars meant that the Grand Narrative which had promoted absolute authority figures and hierarchical powers systems ceased to hold the same appeal as it had held for previous generations. Beckett and contemporaries like Ionesco, Sartre and Camus viewed human life as absurd, existing in a random and meaningless universe. Their art reflects this absurdity. Waiting for Godot, a ground-breaking play, features characters who lament their lack of purpose and failure to communicate. Humour becomes a bulwark against the despair that might swamp people shorn of their convictions. 10 Nov 11 Contemporary Theatre and Millennial Angst: Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia Stoppard started his career as an absurdist, but by the 1990s had infused his work with a more optimistic, if post-modern, philosophy. Arcadia explores discoveries in science such as chaos theory and Fermat’s Last Theorem, using landscape gardening and Romantic versus Enlightenment aesthetics as analogies. The intellectual characters in two time periods all reach the conclusion that seeking and sharing knowledge keeps millennial angst at bay. Rev 0 2016/02/23 Page 2 of 2