First-Year Seminars 110GR - Greek Tragedy, American Drama, and Film

Greek Tragedy/American Drama

Fall
2020
01
4.00
Bruce Arnold
M 08:45PM-10:00PM;TTH 08:30PM-10:15PM;WF 09:15PM-10:15PM
Mount Holyoke College
112105
barnold@mtholyoke.edu
The Greeks, beginning with Homer, saw the world from an essentially tragic perspective. The searing question of why human societies and the human psyche repeatedly break down in tragic ruin and loss, particularly in the conflicts of war and in the betrayal of personal bonds of love and friendship, fascinated them as it still does us. The most consistent themes that emerged from such examination are the tragedy of self-knowledge and illusion, the tragedy of desire, the tragedy of crime and redemption, and tragedy as a protest against social injustice. This course examines the critical influence of the three most important Athenian dramatists, Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, on the works of Nobel winner Eugene O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller and important filmmakers, who have tried to recreate the powerful atmosphere and impact of the Greek tragic theater or reworked the tragic themes of classical myth for their own purposes in the modern age.
Mount Holyoke first-year students only, by placement.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.