Intro antigone

18
a Greek play by Sophocles 442 B.C. 1. Greek Theatre 2. Sophocles 3. Sophocles’ Oedipus

Transcript of Intro antigone

Page 1: Intro antigone

a Greek play by Sophocles

442 B.C.

1. Greek Theatre2. Sophocles3. Sophocles’ Oedipus

Page 2: Intro antigone
Page 3: Intro antigone

It was first developed in 1200 BC when a group of people began celebrating the god Dionysus (God of poetry, song, drama and wine)

The Cult of Dionysus used dancing, singing, etc. as a way of honoring him

Later, Greek playwrights used these celebrations to tell stories using a chorus (up to 30 men)

Page 4: Intro antigone

Only men were allowed to “act” in the chorus

The “plays” were comical at first to please the god

In the 5th Century BC, Thespis added an actor to the chorus, Aeschylus then added another

Sophocles added a 3rd main character (actor) to create triangles for plot and to perform the story.

The chorus still existed to provide commentary and voice for the “people” in the play; the actors now actually performed the story.

Page 5: Intro antigone

During Sophocles’s time, the plays took on a tragic theme

Sophocles is considered to be the father of the Greek Tragedy

Tragedy comes from the Greek word “tragoidia” which means “goat-song” because the cult sacrificed a goat before the “play”

Page 6: Intro antigone

496-406 B.C.

Page 7: Intro antigone

Wrote 123-125 playsOnly 7 were found to this dayBorn to a wealthy family in Athens, Greece

Was an athlete, scholar, businessman, and poet before he wrote his first play

Page 8: Intro antigone

He won at the Festival of Athens 24 times (96 plays in all)

He changed the way trilogies were written

Before they were dependent upon each other for completion

Sophocles wrote plays that went together, but had separate story lines

Developed the tragic heroine (women in dominant role)

Page 9: Intro antigone

Wrote Antigone in 442 BCOedipus Rex (Oedipus the King) in 407 BC

Oedipus at Colonus in 406 BCPlays are performed in this order:

Oedipus RexOedipus at ColonusAntigone

Page 10: Intro antigone

Part Three: The Tragic History of Sophocles’

Page 11: Intro antigone

Play order:

Oedipus Rex (Oedipus the King)

Oedipus at Colonus

Antigone

Page 12: Intro antigone

Oedipus was born in the city of Thebes to Laius and Jocasta.

Son of cowardly, but royal, parents who sent him off with a servant who had orders for him to be left for dead; the servant gave Oedipus to the King and Queen of Corinth to raise.

Page 13: Intro antigone

The Oracle foretold that Laius would die by his son’s hand.

Laius’s Grave

Fast forward after a good childhood in Corinth…

Oedipus leaves Corinth after learning that he will kill his father and marry his mother.

Again Enter the Oracle…

Page 14: Intro antigone

Oedipus, while walking to Thebes, runs into an old man with a gang blocking the road, whom he kills in self-defense.

When he gets to Thebes, he wins the battle of logic against the Sphinx guarding the city, is proclaimed a hero and marries a wife.

His wife’s name….

The man he killed….

Page 15: Intro antigone

Before Oedipus learns of this…

Oedipus and Jocasta have four children, two boys (Polynieces and Eteocles) and two girls (Antigone and Ismene) ---

One Big, Happy Family

Oedipus becomes King and rules Thebes.

And then, a prophet tells Oedipus that his parents in Corinth weren’t his real parents. He decides to find out who his real parents are…

Page 16: Intro antigone

Oedipus finds out that his parents were really King and Queen of Thebes… (the man he just killed/woman he married)Jocasta commits suicide (by hanging) after finding that the servant betrayed her wishes so long ago…

Oedipus, after finding Jocasta dead, scratches out his eyes out with the pins from her dress…

Creon, Jocasta’s brother, takes over rule of Thebes and Oedipus is cast out of Thebes…

After years of roaming Greece blind and poor, Oedipus dies, by rule of the gods, in the city of Colonus.

Page 17: Intro antigone

Oedipus’s sons come to him before his death to find out who should rightfully rule Thebes.

Oedipus curses them both for being greedy and asks the Gods to take his life.

Soon, Polynieces and Eteocles return to Thebes and fight over who should rule. Polynieces is sent out, while Eteocles stays to guard the city.

Polynieces goes to Argos and raises an army to attack Thebes’s seven gates into the city.

Eteocles rushes to one of the gates to defend Thebes, where he unknowingly battles his brother…

Page 18: Intro antigone

And so begins the play, Antigone….