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Tragedy

By: Joy Cagil, Thu Dec 8th, 2005 11:28:40 PM

The word tragedy comes from the Greek tragoidia, consisting of two

possible words. The first one is tragos, meaning he-goat. The

ancient Greek tragedy was influenced by the Peloponnesian satyr

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play. As the Romans called them, "Satyrs" were fauns--goatlike

creatures--who were famous for being constantly drunk and chasing

nymphs. The second word is oidia, which comes from the root

oeidein meaning to sing.

In general, tragedy is a description of a fact of life. In our

time, in day to day usage, the word tragedy defines a disastrous

event, a calamity, or a series of terrible events.

In its historical and literary usage, however, the word tragedy

carries a deeper meaning. On one hand, tragedies are those

disasters that happen by chance to the people involved who are not

able to control the events. On the other hand, they are the

images and stories of man in conflict with himself, his

adversaries, or the world around him. The aim man's tragedy is to

succeed as a human by gaining meaning, love, understanding, and

wisdom through the ordeals.

During the fifth century Greece and during the seventeenth century

England and France, tragedy experienced its two most popular

periods.

The origins of Greek tragedy are little known and foggy. One

theory is that tragedy had its roots in the fertility ceremony of

the God Dionysus, when the plays with the death and rebirth themes

were put on stage during spring. Of the hundreds and maybe

thousands of plays written for this celebration we have only

thirty-three left today: those of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and

Euripides. These early playwrights treated tragedy in their own

unique way. Their common denominator was the connection between

men and Gods, heavily emphasizing the role of fate, necessity, and

the supreme rule of the Gods.

The seventeenth century tragedy honors go to Shakespeare who wrote

his plays mainly to entertain London audiences. With Shakespeare,

the hero is usually a famous and kindly figure who falls into some

kind of a disaster through a flaw in his character. The

Shakespearean tragedy points out to the good that has become

spoiled through mishap. Alongside Shakespeare, Corneille and

Racine in France wrote tragedies during the same era. Unlike

Shakespeare, however, Corneille and Racine's tragedies were harsh,

high-handed, and simple remakes of the old Greek tragedies where

destiny was the supreme ruler.

During the twentieth century, our understanding of tragedy has

evolved through the unfortunate hero's facing sudden revelations

of the facts of character, of the paths he followed when,

suddenly, he gained consciousness and realization. These heroes

became victims and visionaries even though, once in a while, they

lost their lives. Bowman's "Death of a traveling Salesman",

Arthur Miller's, Tennessee Williams', Eugene O'Neil's, Joseph

Conrad's and Hemingway's works are some of the examples. Poets

like Robert Penn Warren and Yeats, also employed tragedy in their

subject matter, because tragedy happens in life.

Tragedy shows itself in the struggle of man against nature, man

against man, man against fate, man against convention, man against

reason with irreconcilable differences. These struggles usually

move from safety to calamity as the hidden self is revealed. It

is in this revelation, in this movement, that tragedy becomes

attractive. After all, as long as the world stands, the

calamities and disasters in real life that fall upon human

beings--because they are human beings--will be inevitable.

Since we human beings plan to stay human, we are going to reflect

those events in our art and in our writing. In other words, if

we'll bleed, we'll write about it.

About the author: Joy Cagil is an author on Writing.com. http://www.Writing.com/ ( http://www.Writing.Com/ ). Her background is in foreign languages and linguistics. Her portfolio can be found at www2.writing.com/main/view_item/user_id/joycag.

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