Milli mála - 01.01.2011, Page 86

Milli mála - 01.01.2011, Page 86
86 Rome. Did it exhaust its possibilities as a dramatic genre, leaving a host of grand scale theatres empty in its wake? Did the idea of tragedy lie moribund in the accounts of lexicographers in the interim period before it slowly seeped into other genres (such as poetry and fiction), waiting until suitable conditions for stage drama prevailed again? This crux lies at the centre of tragic theory. While some scholars believe that something essentially tragic was lost by the second century BCE, never to be revived (in other words that tragedy could not adapt beyond a certain point), others are willing to see the evolution of tragedy as a series of adaptations and mutations that connect the original form with what exists now.21 Thus, instead of subscribing to Nietzsche’s proclamation that tragedy ‘died’ almost in its birth throes, after losing its Dionysian inspiration, or to George Steiner’s claim that it met its demise in eighteenth century France, killed off by rationalism, we can instead see tragedy as having undergone various alterations, some of them amounting to radical mutations, but still recognize it as a genre.22 This would not only provide a rational snub to the essentialist argument—tragedy is essentially Athenian and what was not written in ancient Athens is therefore not tragedy—but it would also allow us to look at other, more important issues. On these grounds, to take one small example, the actual presence of a chorus need not be a decisive feature if one can either show that the function of a chorus has been replaced by some other element in a tragedy or that it has become vestigial. This approach seems a good deal more sensible than trying to prove that Henrik Ibsen, August Strindberg, Samuel Beckett, T.S. Eliot, Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams et alia did not write tragedy because their plays do not conform exactly to the Greek model. 21 The ‘decline’, if not actual demise of tragedy may be traced back as far as Aristotle, who believed, three centuries after its inception, that the form was no longer as important as it had once been. Since that time, Sophocles and Aeschylus have traditionally been considered as masters of the genre and Euripides as being on a somewhat lower level, a judgement erroneously based on the number of times each won the coveted first prize. 22 See Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy Out of the Spirit of Music, London: Penguin, 1993. The post-Sophoclean decline and ultimate demise of tragedy is referred to a number of times in the text. See especially, though, Section 11, pp. 54–59. Although Steiner gives no specific date, he makes it clear that modernity offers compensation for tragic fate by removing the concepts of eternal suffering. Rousseauism, in asserting the ‘perfectability of man’, effectively ‘closes the doors of hell’ and thereby renders tragedy impossible. George Steiner, The Death of Tragedy, London: Faber, 1961, p. 127. ADAPTATION STUDIES AND BIOLOGICAL MODELS: ANTIGONE AS A TEST CASE
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