Sunday, October 30, 2011

Euripides II--Andromache

Please read Euripides' Andromache for Thursday's class (November 3).

Choose one of the five narrative essentials (plot, character, theme, setting, tone) and compare this play to one of the other tragedies we've read in terms of that "essential."  Does Euripides do something particularly impressive with that feature of his story, something that makes you especially like this play?  Is there anything in Euripides treatment of this essential that makes you not like this play as much as some of the others?

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Euripides Discussion I (Alcestis)

Suppose you have just seen the first Athenian production of Euripides' Alcestis. Write a "thumbs up" or "thumbs down" review of the production as you imagine it.

Include in your review responses to earlier reviewers if you like.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Philoctetes

Many think that Oedipus Rex is Sophocles' finest play--perhaps the finest tragedy ever written. Others think the lesser-known Philoctetes an even greater play. Did you like Philoctetes better than Oedipus Rex? Not as much? Why? What do you think Sophocles does particularly well in Philoctetes--or, perhaps, not so well?

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Oedipus the King

For Thursday's class, please read Sophocles' Oedipus Rex (either online or in Levi Lind's Ten Greek Plays in Contemporary Translation).

Choose one (1) of the "narrative essentials" (plot, theme, character, setting, and tone) and note one way in which Sophocles' Oedipus Rex reflects a particularly skillful handling of that "essential."  Please cite the passage you have in mind both by line number and a general description of that passage.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Aeschylus' Agamemnon

Please read Aeschylus' Agamemnon (pp. 37-76 of Levi Lind's Ten Greek Plays in Contemporary Translation).

Directors sometimes encourage their actors to choose one special line and to center their whole performance on building to and building off that line. Assume you are asked to play one of the characters in Agamemnon or to be a member of the chorus. What line would you choose for your "special" line? How would you build up to or build off that line? Why would you choose that particular line?

By the way, the first part of next class will be devoted to a discussion of the major themes in Prometheus Bound. If you have not read that play already, please be sure to have that play too read before Tuesday's class.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Herodotus--Discussion III

Among his many works, Plutarch wrote an essay "On the Malignity (Malice) of Herodotus," a work in which he criticizes the father of history as a slanderer and a blasphemer, a man who dwells on the negative and omits the noble and the good. He admits that Herodotus is a great artist, but (he says) that only makes things worse.

Please read as much as you can of Books 8 and 9 of Herodotus' history. Be sure to read Book 9, Sections 90-122 (pp. 590-603 in the new Penguin edition). Cite one story from this section *and* one story *from some other part* of Herodotus' Histories that either supports Plutarch's criticisms or shows that Herodotus includes more than just negatives.