Tragedy, or the Song of the Goat: From the Dithyramb to the Universal Law
The word "tragedy" entered common usage as a designation of the highest degree of misfortune. However, its original Greek meaning — τραγῳδία (tragōidía) — literally translates as "goat song" (from tragos — goat and ōidē — song). This strange, almost paradoxical term is the key to understanding one of the greatest inventions of the ancient spirit — an artistic form that transformed a ritual act into a law of human existence in the face of fate, gods, and one's own nature.
Origins: Between Ritual and CompetitionThe scientific consensus links the origin of tragedy to the dithyramb — a choral hymn in honor of Dionysus, the god of winemaking, ecstasy, and life-giving forces of nature. During the Dionysian processions, participants dressed in goat skins and masks (or, according to another version, competing for a live goat as a prize) sang songs narrating the sufferings of the god. Gradually, the first actor emerged from the chorus (according to tradition, it was Thespis in the 6th century BC), who entered into dialogue with the chorus. Thus, the dramatic structure was born.
It is important to understand that tragedy has always been a sacred-civic act, not entertainment. Its performance in Athens in the 5th century BC during the Great Dionysia was an event of state importance. The three-day competition of tragic poets (each representing a tetralogy — three tragedies and one satyr play) was attended by all citizens. This was a collective experience of catharsis (purification) — a term introduced by Aristotle in "Poetics" to describe the action of tragedy that evokes "pity and fear" and thereby leads to an emotional and ethical release.
Structure of Worldview: Hero, Fate, Hubris
The classical Athenian tragedy (Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides) developed an immutable structure of conflict. At its center is a hero, an outstanding individual (a king, a hero of myths), endowed with hubris (ὕβρις) — pride, ...
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