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04-06-2009, 04:24 PM | #11 | |||
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Mk 8:31 And he began to teach them that the Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again. Quote:
Besides, if you read what I say, you will not accuse me of "pushing" Greek drama on the gospel. I find the similarity in that it evidently operates with the concept of destiny. But I also find there is a significant difference in that Mark's translation of Paul's Christ into a passion play, Jesus knows his mission which is to carry God's will of his sacrifice. Mark transforms the hero's tragic fault (I don't agree with JW that Mark thought Jesus was flawed) into human weakness, in which the adopted man-god asks God for a reprieve from his destiny and in his torment on the cross feels the separation from, and abandonment by, his heavenly Father. Those are the key dramatic elements of Mark that I see. Jiri |
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04-06-2009, 04:43 PM | #12 | ||
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I grant you there are dramatic elements in the gospels. I think, though, Joe in the OP was more after the narrative structure of Mark rather than dramatic techniques in the gospels generally. Best, Jiri |
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04-06-2009, 05:25 PM | #13 |
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Wouldn't the writer of Mark, if writing in Greek, have learned how to read and write by imitating popular Greek works of his time (Plato, Homer)? Much like how we all learn Shakespeare?
I'm more than likely wrong, but weren't the only two types of stories for entertainment written back then either Greek tragedies or Greek comedies? |
04-07-2009, 08:30 AM | #14 | ||
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John's Comedy vs. Mark's Tragedy
Hi Jiri,
Yes, I think Joe is trying to bring out the affinity of Mark with Greek tragedy. I think it is more interesting that while Mark, Matthew, and Luke are attempting retelling the Jesus tale as a Greek tragedy, John seems to be retelling it as a comedy. In this, he seems to be agreeing with the gnostics. A good question may be, was the Jesus story based on a comedy before it was turned into a pseudo-tragedy? As a comedy, the romance between Mary Magdalene and Jesus would have been a key and central element. Despite the extreme censorship in all the bible versions, it appears over and over again -the meeting at the well, the Martha-Mary scenes, the Lazarus resurrection scenes, the annointing scenes, and the tomb scenes. Except for the crucifixion scene, almost all of the scenes in the gospels are comedic in one way or another. This is a huge clue that the original source material was comedic. So how does comedy get turned into tragedy? Consider, Francois Truffaut's film "Jules and Jim." What is the most lighthearted of comedies, ends suddenly on a tragic note. But then, before we have time to grieve for the tragedy, there emerges a cute little coda to soften things: Jules narrates that Katherine had wanted her ashes scattered to the winds, but "that was against the rules." Katherine, of course, made her own rules, so the ending is perfectly ironic: rules only apply to the dead, not the living. Katherine is the ultimate femme fatale. In the same way, the gospel endings, the appearances and resurrections and even the ending of Mark with the women saying nothing are also ironic in the same way. They soften the tragedy of the crucifixion, but at the cost of making the appearance of Jesus on Earth totally meaningless. The son of God appears and nobody notices. The son of God goes back home. Nothing changes. This too indicates that the source material was likely comedic. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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04-07-2009, 09:19 AM | #15 | ||
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As for tragedies and comedies. Pericles' Athens was the high-point for such drama. The mainstay of entertainment throughout antiquity was slapstick and mime. High-mime drew off the same lore as earlier high drama (Hippolytus etc.) but it was played for laughs and immediate reaction. In other words, per Solo, there is Greekness in Mark (Fate) but not Greek drama. |
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04-07-2009, 12:22 PM | #16 |
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The tendency in Hellenistic writing to merge together History and the conventions of tragic drama may be relevant.
See tragic history Andrew Criddle |
01-25-2010, 07:55 AM | #17 | ||||||||
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Mission Impossible
JW:
It's clear that "Mark" has significant elements of Greek Tragedy. I see the intended genre of the Gospels as follows: "Mark" = Greek Tragedy "Matthew" = Interpretation of "Mark" as history "Luke" = History based on witnesses. "John" = The Gospel is the witness testimony for history. Note that "Mark" than falls in the category of Poetics per Aristotle. Since "Mark" is primarily fiction the source can not be historical. It must be fiction (which can contain some history). The d-e-v-e-l-o-p-m-e-n-t of Christianity than could not be explained by history, it could only be explained by what the writers of "history" wanted as history. Hence, the path above. In Poetics Aristotle describes the features of Poetics and specifically Tragedy and the elements of Tragedy. Included are characteristics of the Tragic hero. Here is one summary of the characteristics: Litonline Introduction to Literature English 112 (English Composition II) Quote:
It's natural to assume that Jesus would be the Tragic or otherwise hero of "Mark" and therefore, the common objection here is that Jesus had no fatal flaw. While I think you can use "Mark's" Jesus to fit most of the above fairly well, I think it is actually Peter that "Mark" intends as the tragic hero and if so, than the Tragic flaw is fixed (so to speak), The support for this is that "Mark's" Jesus is clearly Separationist. The Christ part is Divine. Therefore, Jesus Christ in "Mark" is primarily a Divine character, a god, something that is limited to creating the setting for the choices that the human characters will make. Since the audience is not Divine they can not identify with Jesus directly, the audience can only identify with the human characters like Peter. Jesus' Mission in "Mark" is to convince the Disciples of his Passion. This Mission is clearly a failure in "Mark" (this is exactly what the subsequent Gospels/Forged "Mark" needed to fix thereby moving them out of the Tragedy genre). The question becomes, "who's failure is this?". If it was not Jesus' fault than it must be the disciples and Peter's fault. Let's look at the characteristics: Quote:
Peter meets all the requirements here: 1) Noble = His intentions are good 2) Status = He is the lead disciple of Jesus Quote:
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2) Hubris = Peter Quote:
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2) Pity = The most common emotion of Jesus within the Gospel and the most common emotion of the audience to Jesus outside the Gospel. 3) Catharsis = Peter has at the Text level and the Reader has at the Sub-text level 4) Religious festivals and community celebrations = Kramer? Kramer: (pointing emphatically) Uh, Bingo! Thus we have it on good authority that "Mark's" Peter fits Aristotle's definition of the Tragic hero well. Again, the go to book appears to be Gilbert G. Bilezikian's The liberated Gospel: A comparison of the Gospel of Mark and Greek tragedy (Baker Biblical monograph) (or via: amazon.co.uk) Which apparently is even more difficult to obtain than The Nine Gates of the Kingdom of Shadows. As I appear to currently be the foremost authority in the world now on "Mark" as Greek Tragedy there would seem to be no escaping my destiny of a fate of purchasing this book (and maybe even reading it). Joseph ErrancyWiki |
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01-30-2010, 06:14 AM | #18 |
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Something seems not quite the fit we are looking for when we apply the qualities to a support role and not the main character. Peter is there as a foil to make the main character look extra good.
Is it right to try to apply Aristotle's description to a "tragedy" about a god? Is not Aristotle addressing a more human story? What can be said about Prometheus (Aeschylus) and The Bacchinalia (Euripides) -- these might be closer types to the gospel? |
01-30-2010, 09:20 AM | #19 | |
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http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=272011
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01-30-2010, 09:21 AM | #20 | |
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No question that in the classical Greek Tragedy the main character is the hero and the main character in "Mark" is clearly Jesus. Here I'm just asking that you consider how well Peter otherwise fits Aristotle's definition of tragic character. Aristotle explains that a key element of Tragedy is to evoke strong emotions in the audience, especially fear. Ask yourself who the author wants you the Reader to identify with. I think its Peter and not Jesus. You may as a Reader be critical of Peter, but I think Peter is the viewpoint of the Reader and not Jesus. The Reader is supposed to learn mainly by Peter's negative formula example as a disciple and not Jesus' positive formula example as a savior. Joseph ErrancyWiki |
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