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Why is Aristophanes called "The Father of Comedy"? - Mark Robinson

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    At the annual Athenian
    drama festival in 426 BC,
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    a comic play called The Babylonians,
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    written by a young poet
    named Aristophanes,
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    was awarded first prize.
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    But the play’s depiction of Athens’
    conduct during the Peloponnesian War
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    was so controversial that afterwards,
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    a politician named Kleon
    took Aristophanes to court
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    for "slandering the people of Athens
    in the presence of foreigners."
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    Aristophanes struck back two years later
    with a play called The Knights.
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    In it, he openly mocked Kleon,
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    ending with Kleon’s character working as
    a lowly sausage seller
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    outside the city gates.
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    This style of satire was a consequence
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    of the unrestricted democracy
    of 5th century Athens
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    and is now called "Old Comedy."
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    Aristophanes’ plays, the world’s earliest
    surviving comic dramas,
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    are stuffed full of parodies, songs,
    sexual jokes, and surreal fantasy.
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    They often use wild situations,
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    like a hero flying to heaven
    on a dung beetle,
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    or a net cast over a house to keep
    the owner’s father trapped inside,
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    in order to subvert audience expectations.
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    And they’ve shaped how comedy’s
    been written and performed ever since.
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    The word "comedy" comes from
    the Ancient Greek "komos," – revel,
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    and "oide," – singing,
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    and it differed from its companion
    art form, "tragedy" in many ways.
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    Where ancient Athenian tragedies dealt
    with the downfall of the high and mighty,
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    their comedies usually ended happily.
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    And where tragedy almost always
    borrowed stories from legend,
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    comedy addressed current events.
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    Aristophanes’ comedies celebrated ordinary
    people and attacked the powerful.
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    His targets were arrogant politicians,
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    war-mongering generals,
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    and self-important intellectuals,
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    exactly the people who sat in
    the front row of the theatre,
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    where everyone could see their reactions.
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    As a result, they were referred to
    as komoidoumenoi:
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    "those made fun of in comedy."
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    Aristophanes’ vicious
    and often obscene mockery
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    held these leaders to account,
    testing their commitment to the city.
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    One issue, in particular,
    inspired much of Aristophanes’ work:
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    the Peloponnesian War
    between Athens and Sparta.
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    In Peace, written in 421 BC,
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    a middle-aged Athenian frees
    the embodiment of peace from a cave,
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    where she’d been exiled
    by profiteering politicians.
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    Then, in the aftermath of a crushing
    naval defeat for Athens in 411 BC,
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    Aristophanes wrote "Lysistrata."
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    In this play, the women
    of Athens grow sick of war
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    and go on a sex strike
    until their husbands make peace.
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    Other plays use similarly fantastic
    scenarios to skewer topical situations,
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    such as in "Clouds,"
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    where Aristophanes mocked
    fashionable philosophical thinking.
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    The hero Strepsiades enrolls in
    Socrates’s new philosophical school,
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    where he learns
    how to prove that wrong is right
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    and that a debt is not a debt.
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    No matter how outlandish these plays get,
    the heroes always prevail in the end.
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    Aristophanes also became
    the master of the parabasis,
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    a comic technique where actors
    address the audience directly,
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    often praising the playwright
    or making topical comments and jokes.
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    For example, in "Birds,"
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    the Chorus takes
    the role of different birds
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    and threatens the Athenian judges that
    if their play doesn’t win first prize,
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    they’ll defecate on them
    as they walk around the city.
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    Perhaps the judges
    didn’t appreciate the joke,
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    as the play came in second.
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    By exploring new ideas
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    and encouraging self-criticism
    in Athenian society,
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    Aristophanes not only
    mocked his fellow citizens,
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    but he shaped the nature of comedy itself.
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    Hailed by some scholars
    as the father of comedy,
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    his fingerprints are visible
    upon comic techniques everywhere,
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    from slapstick
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    to double acts
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    to impersonations
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    to political satire.
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    Through the praise of free speech
    and the celebration of ordinary heroes,
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    his plays made his audience think
    while they laughed.
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    And his retort to Kleon in 425 BC
    still resonates today:
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    “I’m a comedian,
    so I’ll speak about justice,
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    no matter how hard
    it sounds to your ears.”
Title:
Why is Aristophanes called "The Father of Comedy"? - Mark Robinson
Speaker:
Mark Robinson
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-is-aristophanes-called-the-father-of-comedy-mark-robinson

Aristophanes, often referred to as the Father of Comedy, wrote the world’s earliest surviving comic dramas. They're stuffed full of parodies, songs, sexual jokes and surreal fantasy -- and they’ve shaped how comedy’s been written and performed ever since. Mark Robinson shares a brief history of Aristophanes.

Lesson by Mark Robinson, directed by Anton Bogaty.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:59

English subtitles

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