TRAGEDY

form of drama that depicts the suffering of a heroic individual who is often overcome by the very obstacles he is struggling to remove. The protagonist may be brought low by a character flaw or, as Hegel stated, caught in a "collision of equally justified ethical aims."

See also drama, Western; comedy.

Ancient Tragedies

The earliest tragedies were part of the Attic religious festivals held in honor of the god Dionysus (5th cent. b.c.). The ritual entailed the presentation of four successive plays (three tragedies, one comedy). Each was based on situations and characters drawn from myth, and the tragedies ended in catastrophe for the heroes and heroines. The most famous ancient tragedies are probably the Oresteia (a trilogy) of Aeschylus, Sophocles' Oedipus Rex, and Euripides' Trojan Women.

In his definitive analysis of tragedy in the Poetics (late 4th cent. b.c.), Aristotle points out its ritual function as catharsis: spectators are purged of their own emotions of pity and fear through their vicarious participation in the drama. The plays of the Roman tragedian Seneca—including Hercules,Medea,Phaedra, and Agamemnon—were established on certain conventions, notably violence, revenge, and the appearance of ghosts.

Renaissance and Later Tragedy

Roman works are significant not for their intrinsic grandeur but for their usefulness as models for such Renaissance dramas as Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine (1587) and Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy (1594), often cited as the first revenge tragedy. These in turn served as models for the towering tragedies of the period, Marlowe's Dr. Faustus (1588); Shakespeare's Othello, Macbeth, Hamlet, and King Lear (1600–1607); and John Webster's Duchess of Malfi (1614). The tradition of the tragic hero was to continue for the next 300 years, reinforced not only by English dramatists but by such European playwrights as the Spaniards Lope de Vega and Calderón de la Barca; the Frenchmen Pierre Corneille and Jean Racine; and the Germans G. E. Lessing, Goethe, and Schiller.

Moral, Domestic, and Political Tragedy

Tragedy can also be a vision of life, one shared by most Western cultures and having its roots in the Judeo-Christian tradition. To reflect this wider sense of the human dilemma, where men feel compelled to confront evil, yet where evil prevails, a second dramatic tradition evolved. Its roots go back once again to religious drama, in this case the mystery and morality plays of medieval England, France, and Germany (see miracle play; morality play). Unlike classical drama, these plays, of which Everyman is the best known, emphasize the accountability of ordinary people. Even plays about the divine Christ stress human suffering and sacrifice.

The tragic lot of the common man and woman thus found its way into the dramatic repertory of later ages. George Lillo's London Merchant (1731) is an early example of domestic tragedy, as Georg Büchner's Danton's Death (1835) is of political tragedy. Henrik Ibsen's Doll's House (1879) and An Enemy of the People (1882) are also superb examples of the domestic and the political tragedy, respectively.

Twentieth-Century Tragedy

The cataclysmic events of the 20th cent.—two world wars, the destructive use of atomic power, the disintegration of family and community life—have caused a radical diminution of the vision of life embodied by the earlier domestic and political tragedy. Its shrinkage is evident in such plays as Eugene O'Neill's Mourning Becomes Electra (1931) and Long Day's Journey into Night (1956), Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage (1941), Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman (1949), and Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot (1953).

Each of the latter works can be labeled tragedy, if rather loosely. The pattern first seen by Aristotle is still discernible. The protagonist is, as always, defeated by opposing forces—Freudian behavior patterns, wartime attrition, loss of identity, drugs, or alcohol, if not pride, ambition, and jealousy. And still felt is the mysterious cathartic exaltation at the end of a powerful theatrical experience. Despite quibbling about the exact meaning and application of the word tragedy, most critics would agree in saying that some of the works of such 20th-century dramatists as Anton Chekhov, August Strindberg, Luigi Pirandello, Gabriele D'Annunzio, Ugo Betti, Michel de Ghelderode, Sean O'Casey, Jean Anouilh, and Tennessee Williams may be classed as tragedy.

Bibliography

See B. H. Clark, ed., European Theories of the Drama (rev. ed. 1947); R. B. Sewall, The Vision of Tragedy (1959); R. Williams, Modern Tragedy (1966); G. Brereton, Principles of Tragedy (1968); O. Mandel, A Definition of Tragedy (1982); C. Belsey, The Subject of Tragedy (1985); H. A. Mason, The Tragic Plane (1986); T. Eagleton, Sweet Violence: The Idea of the Tragic (2002).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Coriolanus Death of a Salesman Electra (Euripides) Electra (Sophocles)
Elizabethan Drama Friedrich Nietzsche German Drama Greek Tragedy
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books on: Tragedy  - 39802 results

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requires. Many recognized tragedies and important theories of tragedy reject or ignore widely supported...appear more enigmatic than tragedy or have spawned more attempts...regular intervals new studies of tragedy issue forth, adapting relativistic...
...Eliot, Four Quartets "Burnt Norton", I . 14. "Tragedy and the Medium ", in F. R. Leavis, The Common...1952 130-1; see Silk and Stern, Nietzsche on Tragedy , 277-8. "Greek tragedy is poetry" is the robust claim of Lattimore...
...extreme or limiting views of tragedy. One of these is the theory that all tragedy exhibits the omnipotence...overwhelming majority of tragedies do leave us with a sense...the fatalistic reduction of tragedy confuses the tragic condition...
...is redundant to suggest that tragedy is dead or decrepit; that...when books and articles on tragedy rival in number those on Shakespeare...I cannot expect that modern tragedies will contain formal statements...as Walter Kaufmann, in his Tragedy and Philosophy, who decides...
Critical Works on Greek Tragedy Alford C. Fred. The Psychoanalytic Theory of Greek Tragedy . 1992. Aristotle. Poetics . Trans. Gerald...1967. Bouvrie SynnOve des. Women in Greek Tragedy . 1990. Brendan Christopher, and Reginald...
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...read with the weight of tragedy. Since most of the...channels the great social tragedies of our time (colonial...plays relationship with tragedy and tragic theory paradoxically...justifies the existence of tragedy "after" Darwin. But...choral rhythm of ancient tragedies, provides that the...
...Racine and beyond are tragedies, the genre itself...sanctified: to be a tragedy is to earn a place...usage of the term tragedy, the qualities...us associate with tragedies, though a critic...hero, unlike Greek tragedy--a fact which...that in the later tragedies the heros death...
...assuming that The Revengers Tragedy is Middletons work, presents...composition of The Revengers Tragedy, each of which focuses upon...was not to write his great tragedies for over a decade. Commentators...been reluctant to assign a tragedy to a playwright whose output...
...centuries has for its skeleton tragedy or despair. William Faulkner...Wadlingtons Reading Faulknerian Tragedy (1987) reminds us that Faulkners greatest works are formal tragedies. Faulknerian tragedy is narrative rather than dramatic...
...comparison is the classical tragedies, it is thus obvious that Miss Julie is not a tragedy within the Aristotelian...the ancient writers of tragedy or Shakespeare. The...Shakespeares histories and tragedies espoused. (31) In...With Racines ideal tragedy as an image of what...
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...Explains How He Came to Be Hooked on Greek Tragedy at an Early Age-And Has Stayed Hooked...newspapers were quick to use the word tragedy ... But what I had seen in the theatre...found its most stunning form in Greek tragedy. The supple and dense language of the...
Fatal Harvest: The Tragedy of Industrial Agriculture by Janet Brown Fatal Harvest The Tragedy of Industrial Agriculture Andy Kimbrell, ed...and Island Press The Fatal Harvest Reader The Tragedy of Industrial Agriculture Andy Kimbrell, ed...
Zulu: The Heroism and Tragedy of the Zulu War. by Ian Knight Zulu The Heroism and Tragedy of the Zulu War. Saul David Penguin/Viking...documentaries. Saul Davids Zulu; The Heroism and Tragedy of the Zulu War attempts a meaty history of...
Terror at Beslan: A Russian Tragedy with Lessons for Americas Schools...Terror at Beslan: A Russian Tragedy with Lessons for Americas Schools...blackout on information about the tragedy, Giduck cant name sources without...
Love, Sex and Tragedy: How the Ancient World Shapes Our Lives. by Eva Parisinou Love, Sex and Tragedy How the Ancient World Shapes our Lives Simon Goldhill John Murray 335 pp 18.99 pounds sterling ISBN 0-7195-5549-3 THIS BOOK ASSESSES...
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...happened to Burress is no more than a tragedy than what happened to Michael Vick is a tragedy. No, these are Imitation Tragedies foisted upon us by certain segments...bad about. What would have been a tragedy is if Burress and Vick had never...
The Greater Tragedy. PRESIDENT Arroyo has called on all Filipinos to unite and rise above the tragedy of the "Wowowee" stampede at the Philippine...to conduct a thorough investigation on the tragedy and review existing guidelines on crowd control...
The Greater Tragedy. PRESIDENT Arroyo has called on all Filipinos to unite and rise above the tragedy of the "Wowowee" stampede at the Philippine...to conduct a thorough investigation on the tragedy and review existing guidelines on crowd control...
...Erap Lead in Expressing Sympathy on Tragedy. President Arroyo expressed sadness over...police probe to avoid a repeat of the tragedy. "The President has ordered an immediate...even as we look into the bottom of this tragedy to pinpoint responsibility and to prevent...
Tragedy of Couple; Double Tragedy: A Garda on Duty outside the Finn Residence in Mountbruce, Tipperary...the forestcovered mountains, it was hard to envisage that such a tragedy had unfolded inthis quiet and peaceful rural area and beauty spot...
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...most famous ancient tragedies are probably the Oresteia...definitive analysis of tragedy in the Poetics (late...Thomas Kyd s The Spanish Tragedy (1594), often cited as the first revenge tragedy. These in turn served...models for the towering tragedies of the period, Marlowes...
...the invention of tragedy. Eventually, Aeschylus...the earlier Greek tragedies place more emphasis...language to his love tragedies, which emphasize...England, Restoration tragedy degenerated into...Buchner s powerful tragedy Dantons Death...pessimistic romantic tragedies of Heinrich von...
...Titus of Andronicus Tamora Aaron the Moor Tragedy The Taming of the Shrew 1593 1623 George...Juliet Mercutio Tybalt Friar Laurence Nurse Tragedy Richard II 1595 1597 Holinshed, Chronicles...1579) Brutus Cassius Marc Antony Caesar Tragedy As You Like It 1599 1623 Thomas Lodge...
...literature is concerned, were his tragedies. It is generally agreed that...stronger influence on Renaissance tragedy than did Seneca. His atmosphere...the forming of Renaissance tragedy. The most significant play...was Thomas Kyds The Spanish Tragedy. See studies by M. D. Griffin...
...the self-contained tragedy, and introduced scene painting. Seven complete tragedies (difficult to date...perhaps the earliest tragedy; three actors are used...The most famous of his tragedies (cited by Aristotle as a perfect example of tragedy) is Oedipus Rex or...
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