Post first response: before class 2/6
Post discussion posts before class 2/8
This post requires two responses. First, respond to the four questions below. Replies to the post are moderated. I will read and release them for group discussion on 2/6, which is the deadline for submitting your response to the four questions below. Once released, respond to a post written by one of your classmates (see below). Responses and discussions are due on 2/8. Write your name and section number on the top of your written reply.
FIRST RESPONSE (2/6): As you learned from the reading and videos from the last two weeks, Ancient Greek theatre has roots in the religious rituals of that society. The questions below are about the relationship between religious ritual and theatre. Answer all of the questions.
- Locate the quote by Mircea Eliade in the “Crash Course, Intro to Theatre” video (week 1). In your own words, describe Eliade’s definition of ritual.
- According to Weinstein (week one reading), how does amphitheater architecture contribute to the sense of ritual time (the past being made present)?
- Watch the taped stage production of “Antigone” in Digital Theatre +. What is the previous time that the character Antigone is trying to make “present” in the play “Antigone”? In other words, what action does she want to take and who will be made “present” for the other characters in the play?
- As you can see from the BBC production of “Antigone”, it is not staged on an outdoor amphitheater, but rather in a proscenium style, indoor theatre. The size of the audience for the BBC production was surely smaller than the Ancient Greek performance in an amphitheater and in a proscenium arrangement there would be less awareness of other audience members. While watching the play, think about how the staging would need to change in an outdoor space in front of 4,000 spectators. Choose one scene that you believe would have greater impact if staged in an outdoor amphitheater, specifically in terms of helping the audience feel that the events of Antigone are “made present” (that the audience is watching the original mythological event — think about what Weinstein wrote about the effect of performances in the amphitheater). When citing the scene, add the hour/minute mark on the video so that it can easily be referenced.
DISCUSSION RESPONSE (2/8): Respond to one of your classmate’s responses that you do not agree with. Argue that the scene they chose might work better on a modern, proscenium type stage than in an amphitheater. Explain why.