Section Info: FYSEM-110GR-01

Course Title: Greek Tragedy, American Drama, and Film
Start Date: 08/24/2020 End Date: 10/15/2020
Term: Fall Semester 2020
Description: 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.
Distribution(s): NO - Meets No Distrib. Rqmt , FY - First-Year Seminar , WI - Writing-Intensive
Academic Level Of Course: Undergraduate     Credits:4.00    

Faculty         Phone         Email address        
Bruce Arnold   413-538-2872   barnold@mtholyoke.edu  

Meeting Dates         Method         Meeting days         Meeting times         Building name         Room     Frequency    
08/24/2020 - 10/15/2020   Flex. Immersive Seminar/Disc.   Monday   08:45PM - 10:00PM   TBA   TBA   Weekly
08/24/2020 - 10/15/2020   Flex. Immersive Seminar/Disc.   Tuesday and Thursday   08:30PM - 10:15PM       Weekly
08/24/2020 - 10/15/2020   Flex. Immersive Seminar/Disc.   Wednesday and Friday   09:15PM - 10:15PM       Weekly

REGISTRATION DETAILS

Requisite Courses        
None                    

Comments        
Additional Comments        
Course Tags        
FYSEM0001   First-Year Seminar   This is a First-Year Seminar.  
MOD0001   MOD-1: Courses meeting in Module 1   This course meets in Module 1.  

Cross-listed Sections        
None  

Course Availability
Section status: Closed     Capacity: 16     Enrollment: 16     Available: 0     Waitlist: 0

BOOK INFORMATION

Book List         Required         Publisher Full Price        
Title: Sophocles, Theban Plays
Author: Tr. Meineck & Woodruff,
Copyright: 2003
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN:
Publisher: Hackett
Required   13.00  
Title: Sophocles II
Author: Ed. Griffith,
Copyright: 2013
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN: 9780226311555
Publisher: Univ. of Chicago Press
Required   13.00  
Title: Aeschylus, Oresteia
Author: Tr. Meineck,
Copyright: 1998
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN: 9780872203907
Publisher: Hackett
Required   13.00  
Title: Euripides, Ten Plays
Author: tr. Roche, Paul
Copyright: 1998
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN: 9780451527004
Publisher: Signet Classics
Required   7.95  
Title: Three Plays: Desire Under the Elms, Strange Interlude, Mourning Becomes Ele
Author: Eugene O'Neill,
Copyright: 1995
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN:
Publisher: Vintage
Required   16.95  
Title: A Streetcar Named Desire
Author: Williams, Tennessee
Copyright: 2004
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN: 9780811216029
Publisher: New Directions
Required   11.95  
Title: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Author: Williams, Tennessee
Copyright: 2004
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN: 9780811216012
Publisher: New Directions
Required   13.95  
Title: Death of a Salesman
Author: Miller,
Copyright:
Edition:
Volume:
ISBN: 9780140481341
Publisher: Penguin
Required   14.00  

Additional Book Comments        
This is the complete book list for this class.  
Instructor's comments about the book list: Most all of these books can be purchased as used copies at far lower prices at Amazon.