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Abstract
The idea of the tragic has permeated Western culture for millennia, being closely bound with the concept of the limit of inescapable necessity that has been embodied in and expressed through theatre since the time of the ancient Greeks. This book addresses the question of how the twentieth century – one of the most violent periods of human history – dealt with the fundamental structure that is the tragic. Examining the consciousness of the era through an in-depth analysis of some of the twentieth century’s most outstanding texts – including works by Ibsen, Claudel, O’Neill, Brecht, Camus, Beckett, Pasolini, Grotowski, Delcuvellerie and Josse De Pauw – ‘Modern European Tragedy’ draws a vivid picture of the development that tragedy experienced during this time. Along the way, the book engages with some of the prominent currents of twentieth-century thought and philosophy that can still be found in the varied map of contemporary thought today: the ideas of modern Christianity, psychoanalysis, the theory of the Absurd, nihilism, Marxism and the acceptance of the limit. Together, analyses of these currents serve to support the book’s key avenues of investigation: its explorations of what inspired these key authors to engage with the idea of the tragic; and its explanation of why the contemporary tragic no longer bears the form of classic tragedy.
‘Cascetta offers a synoptic vision that includes many of the twentieth century’s most fascinating “tragic” texts. “Modern European Tragedy” should provoke new conversations on old and important topics.’ —Alan Ackerman, Professor of English, University of Toronto
The idea of the tragic has permeated Western culture for millennia, and has been expressed theatrically since the time of the ancient Greeks. However, it was in the Europe of the twentieth century – one of the most violent periods of human history – that the tragic form significantly developed. ‘Modern European Tragedy’ examines the consciousness of this era, drawing a picture of the development of the tragic through an in-depth analysis of some of the twentieth century’s most outstanding texts.
Annamaria Cascetta is a professor of theatre history and the former director of the Department of Communication and Performing Arts at the Catholic University of Milan.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Modern European Tragedy\r | i | ||
Title\r | iii | ||
Copyright | iv | ||
CONTENTS | vii | ||
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | ix | ||
Introduction | 1 | ||
Relevance of the Tragic, Irrelevance of Tragedy | 1 | ||
The Tragic Scene in the Twentieth Century: A Selection of Dramatic and Performance Texts and a Hypothesis of Interpretation | 3 | ||
Greek Tragedy: An Essential Frame of Reference | 6 | ||
The Scenario of the Twentieth Century: Generations in Violence | 12 | ||
Chapter 1 HUBRIS AND GUILT: GENGANGERE (GHOSTS) BY HENRIK IBSEN | 15 | ||
Janus bifrons | 15 | ||
From Ancient to Modern Tragedy: Ibsen’s Sources | 16 | ||
The Tragic Nuclei | 18 | ||
The Form of Modern Tragedy | 27 | ||
A Perfect Theatrical Machine | 29 | ||
Chapter 2 EVE BECOMES MARY: L’ANNONCE FAITE À MARIE (THE TIDINGS BROUGHT TO MARY) BY PAUL CLAUDEL | 31 | ||
The History of the Text\r | 32 | ||
Chapter 3 THE SCHOOL OF HATRED: MOURNING BECOMES ELECTRA BY EUGENE O’NEILL | 47 | ||
In Europe, Thinking of the New Broadway | 47 | ||
Structure and Plot | 48 | ||
From Electra to Lavinia | 51 | ||
Hatred: The Driving Force of the Tragedy | 53 | ||
Tragic Pessimism: From the Autobiographical Plane to the Historical and the Philosophical-Anthropological | 56 | ||
Chapter 4 THE DESTINY OF MAN IS MAN: MUTTER COURAGE UND IHRE KINDER (MOTHER COURAGE AND HER CHILDREN) BY BERTOLT BRECHT | 59 | ||
The Genesis of the Work | 60 | ||
The Context: Europe in Catastrophe | 60 | ||
A Mother without Tears and a Mute Who Beats the Drum of Vengeance. The Stone Begins to Speak. | 64 | ||
Sources and Contexts: The Mentality of War | 67 | ||
The Limit and Destiny of Humanity Lies in Others. Tragedy Is Not Inevitable. But Courage Learns\r Nothing. | 69 | ||
Tragedy and the Epic Style | 72 | ||
Chapter 5 THE TRAGIC AND THE ABSURD: CALIGULA BY ALBERT CAMUS | 75 | ||
History of the Text and Contexts | 75 | ||
The First Version of Caligula in ‘les trois Absurdes’ | 78 | ||
The Faces of the Absurd: From the First Caligula to the Last | 80 | ||
From the Historical Character to the Tragic-Absurd Character: ‘Poetry is More Philosophical and More Important than History’ | 85 | ||
The Absurd and Caligula’s Way: Nihilism | 86 | ||
Grotesque Tragedy | 88 | ||
Another Way: From Cherea to Rieux | 89 | ||
Chapter 6 DIANOETIC LAUGHTER IN TRAGEDY: ACCEPTING FINITUDE: ENDGAME BY SAMUEL BECKETT | 91 | ||
‘He’s crying. […] Then he’s living’: Weeping and Life | 91 | ||
The Limit and the Evil of the World Disguised as a Minimalist Universe | 93 | ||
Laughing at Tragedy | 97 | ||
Form without Drama | 99 | ||
Chapter 7 THE ARROGANCE OF REASON AND THE ‘DISAPPEARANCE OF THE FIREFLIES’: PILADE (PYLADES) BY PIER PAOLO PASOLINI | 101 | ||
The Idea of the Tragic: Between Structure of the Human and Historical Transformation | 101 | ||
The Theatre as ‘Cultural Ritual’ | 101 | ||
Theatre as the Awareness and Pilot of Change | 102 | ||
An Anthropological Key to Pylades | 103 | ||
The Return of the Same, or Destiny and the March of History | 112 | ||
Chapter 8 THE APOCALYPSE OF A CIVILIZATION: FROM AKROPOLIS TO APOCALYPSIS CUM FIGURIS BY JERZY GROTOWSKI | 117 | ||
An Introductory Summary | 117 | ||
The Language of Nightmare | 122 | ||
Our Acropolis: A Colossal Tragic Farce | 124 | ||
Towards the Tragedy of Apotheosis and Derision: A Laboratory for ‘Poor Theatre’ | 126 | ||
The Simpleton-Christ Theme, or the Challenge of Freedom: The Expulsion | 142 | ||
A Provisional Epilogue BETWEEN THE EXPERIENCE AND THE REPRESENTATION OF THE TRAGIC: TOWARDS A PERFORMATIVE THEATRE | 147 | ||
Endless Horrors in Stage Scripts from the End of the Century: The Representation of Planned Genocide | 147 | ||
Appendix CHRONOLOGY OF PRODUCTIONS | 163 | ||
NOTES | 199 | ||
Introduction The Tragic, Tragedy and the Idea of the Limit | 199 | ||
Chapter 1 Hubris and Guilt: Gegangere (Ghosts) by Henrik Ibsen | 201 | ||
Chapter 2 Eve Becomes Mary: L’annonce faite à Marie (The Tidings Brought to Mary) by Paul Claudel | 205 | ||
Chapter 3 The School of Hatred: Mourning Becomes Electra by Eugene O’Neill | 208 | ||
Chapter 4 The Destiny of Man Is Man: Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder (Mother Courage and Her Children) by Bertolt Brecht | 210 | ||
Chapter 5 The Tragic and the Absurd: Caligula by Albert Camus | 213 | ||
Chapter 6 Dianoetic Laughter in Tragedy: Accepting Finitude: Endgame by Samuel Beckett | 217 | ||
Chapter 7 The Arrogance of Reason and the ‘Disappearance of the Fireflies’: Pilade (Pylades) by Pier Paolo Pasolini | 218 | ||
Chapter 8 The Apocalypse of a Civilization: From Akropolis to Apocalypsis cum figuris by Jerzy Grotowski | 223 | ||
A Provisional Epilogue Between the Experience and the Representation of the Tragic: Towards a Performative Theatre | 230 | ||
INDEX | 233 |