Chapter 1: Theatre and History

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history Webster: "the branch of knowledge that deals systematically with the past" Henry Ford: "more or less bunk" anonymous student: "one damn thing after another" Simon Schauma: "the study of the past in all its splendid messiness"

historiography the study of historical methods

historia the ancient Greek word for questioning i.e. research (into the past) a term coined by Herodotus part of the Ionian Revolution which embraced a search for the elements which underlay all being

are like scientists historians dig for new data in mounds or libraries but cannot repeat an experiment in that regard, historians are more like detectives than scientists they look for evidence

evidence is the basis of all historical study must be put into context, especially when the data are conflicting thus, historians are less like scientists or detectives than lawyers arguing a case

primary evidence the principal type of historical evidence in its most basic form, the contemporaneous accounts of eyewitnesses to some historical event

secondary evidence second-hand accounts gleaned from others recollections of past events considered a lesser form of data the distinction between primary and secondary evidence lies at the heart of many historical controversies e.g. Antigone 905-915

inference connecting the dots allows the creation of a larger picture from a small body of data but also admits bias and distortion relies on what is compelling or cogent to the historian s readership can turn historical scholarship into a popularity contest

tripartition the Indo-European proclivity for seeing triads or threes Ready, Set, Go! the story of the Three Bears Three strikes, you re out! to us, when someone produces three examples, that confirms a case an example of Indo-European bias

Battle of Thermopylae a battle in the Second Persian War (481-479 BCE) a few Greeks hold off the whole Persian army for several days but in the end they all die Herodotus in The Histories pitches this as a moral victory

Ibn Kahldun an Islamic historian and philosopher who outlines seven fallacies of history partisanship to a creed or opinion overconfidence in one s source failure to understand the intention of a source mistaken belief in the truth of a source failure to place an event in context desire to gain the favor of superiors ignorance of the laws governing society

the worst of history but to what extant can a historian make things up entirely? historians are bound by the data and any eye-witnesses to the event

the best of history thus to some extent, history must encompass the truth and good history encompasses more truth than bad history does and all good history involves the pursuit of truth

theatre S. Johnson: an echo of the public s voice Shakespeare: a mirror Giraudoux: a trial Farquhar: a banquet Like hungry guests, a sitting audience looks: Plays are like suppers; poets are the cooks: The founder s you: the table is this place: The carver s we: the prologue is the grace. Each act a course, each scene a different dish...

theatron in ancient Greek literally, an instrument for viewing i.e. the seats not the stage or orchestra or parodoi!

theatre John Cage: theatre takes place all the time wherever one goes Bernard Beckerman: theatre happens whenever one of more human beings, isolated in time and/or space, present themselves to another or others Patti Gillespie: performances by living actors that take place in the presence of living audiences

institution according to Oscar Brockett, theatre is an autonomous activity versus what is merely theatrical but who s to differentiate between theatre and the theatrical? especially in a foreign or past culture! what are the elements of theatre?

elements of theatre language: versus movement in dance, song in opera impersonation: versus rules in a game, teaching in a classroom audience: or, better, viewers n.b. there is a theatre for the deaf, but no theatre for the blind

theatre history the inquiry into instruments for viewing? the fatal allure of positivism is there measurable progress over time? are we as a species ascending from a primitive state to modern enlightenment? cf. E.K. Chambers and the progress of medieval drama

chorus cf. the use of the chorus in later Greek tragedy: tedious archaism or tonic bringing new and constant joy? is the Greek chorus a primitive element in classical tragedy? we must look for evolution, as opposed to progress!