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Class Dramatic Reading Workshop I

  • Presentation

    Presentation

    Caught between the “paradoxical historicity” (Jesi) of the myth and the emerging logos, Tragedy occupies a short period in Greek cultural history. Understanding the richness of such a period and its fecundity is the first objective. Reading these tragedies will also allow a renewed perception of what constitutes the dramatic form as it has emerged in its singularity and its role in human societies. Students are invited to a wider understanding of human behaviour, both as anthropological and psychic experience revealed through the dramatic text. Students should become fairly capable of reading Greek tragedies, not as an alien literary tradition, but as a literary form capable of reaching today's emotions and doubts. Finally, they'll be able to hold tragic text relevant to their own historical and individual experience.
  • Code

    Code

    ULP1977-15439
  • Syllabus

    Syllabus

    1. Ways of reading 1.1. Why read the classics? 2. Reading Greek tragedies: some prior questions 2.1. The classical Greece 2.2. The concepts of tragedy and comedy 2.3. Tragic categories: liberty and necessity; blame and fate; awareness and ignorance 2.4. The “death of tragedy” thesis and the modern attempts for its revitalization 3. Reading plays of the tragic corpus 3.1. Sophocles, Oedipus Rex 3.2. Sophocles, Antigone 3.3. Euripides, The Phoenician Women  
  • Objectives

    Objectives

    To improve reading, analyses and commentary skills. To promote critical thinking and argumentation. To ensure knowledge of the founding texts of the Western dramatic tradition and of its historical and cultural context. To acquire a sense of the formal aspects, whether literary or dramaturgical, of the ancient Greek tragedies. To learn to project the experience of these works in contemporary contexts.
  • Teaching methodologies and assessment

    Teaching methodologies and assessment

    Collective reading of the proposed texts. Plight of the issues reaised and their submission to debate. Recourse to supplementary sources (other dramatic texts, films, records of performances). Lectures by the teacher in order to frame or summarize the activities described.
  • References

    References

    Sófocles – Rei Édipo. Trad. Maria do Céu Fialho. Lisboa: Edições 70, 2006. Sófocles – Antígona. Trad. Marta Várzeas. V.N. Famalicão: Húmus, 2010. Eurípides – Fenícias. In Tragédias. Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2009. Crimp, Martin – O resto já conhecem do cinema. Trad. Isabel Lopes. Porto/V.N. Famalicão: TNSJ/Húmus, 2019.
SINGLE REGISTRATION
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