Required Texts:
1. Aristophanes 1: Clouds, Wasps, Birds (tr. Peter Meineck).
2. Three Plays by Aristophanes. Staging Women (tr. Jeffrey Henderson).
3. Plautus. The Comedies I (edd. Slavitt, Bovie).
4. Terence. The Comedies (ed. P. Bovie).
Course Requirements:
Attendance and Reading: ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED. Most of the work of the class can only be completed by regular attendance and disciplined, consistent adherence to the syllabus. In-class activities will include lecture, web resources, dramatic staging and reading, group work, and open discussions. Every alternate session will focus on an actual play OR an ancient theater topic. Your class participation grade will rest on your contribution to class through questions and discussion. You will receive a daily grade for this work which will be my general assessment of your performance in class: A, B, C, D or 0. An absence for any reason must be counted as a 0 since you cannot participate if you are absent. For sickness or other personal reasons, I will excuse two absences (5% of class time) at the end of the term when computing your grade. You should inform me before class if you are going to be absent on a given day. Please inform me by email or phone in these instances. Remember that absence from rehearsal days when you are needed for performance work will be treated as a regular absence and will be considered against your performance grade as well.
NOTE: Absence from class the entire first week without prior notification will result in instructor removal of student from registration.
Exams: You will take a midterm and a final exam. Each exam will include objective questions, the midterm exam being comprehensive over Greek Old Comedy, the final exam being comprehensive over New Comedy, with the final exam done as a special, less time intensive oral exam. Absence from an exam FOR ANY REASON will result in a much more difficult test.
Oral Assignments: This is a speaking-intensive course, and as such will involve writing of short papers for oral presentation according to the following guidelines.
5% Oral Presentation - "What makes me laugh: an examination of my sense
of humor and the comedy that works on me"
You will write a 1-1 1/2 page essay on this subject for oral presentation
in class as listed on the syllabus. Everyone's written text is due that
day. NO ONE can take more than 2 1/2 minutes to deliver his or her essay.
So time yourself on a comfortable reading speed. The sky is the limit on
your format. I have had people bring props, write a poem, sing a song, or
simply deliver a standard critique with good examples of what you find funny.
Don't hold back, be honest and be funny. Use personal examples, but be sure
to EXPLAIN yourself clearly.
10% Oral Presentation - "How does this get to be funny?"
1) Choose a scene from a comic movie, sitcom, play on video or opera/operetta
that you find funny and think you could explain to others what really makes
it funny. The scene should be less than 5 minutes long, which is a lot of
playing time, but watch your timing very carefully. Make a videotape copy
of this scene, or cue up a tape to the scene you wish to present.
2) Choose some introductory comments you want to make to set up your video.
This should be less than one minute.
3) Write a critique of the scene or a step by step analysis of the comic
process. Briefly explain the characters and just enough context for everyone
to understand the situation(s) leading up to this moment. You may write this
out in a full text or on note cards, or if you are comfortable and good at
it, you may ad-lib, but I do want everyone to turn in something written, whether
complete text or notes. The main point you are trying to get across is what
process of interaction, acting, directing, circumstances, and comic techniques
are being brought together to make this scene funny. The entire presentation,
including running videotape must be ten minutes or less. Less is better,
but make your point.
4) Grading will be divided between an assessment of your material choice
and organization/writing (60%), including appropriateness of your material
for
your audience), on the one hand, and your presentation skills (delivery,
communication with audience, voice appropriateness, etc.) (40%). You may
ask me
before hand at anytime about how you should proceed with your project.
5) Again as a general guideline, remember that a full page of regularly
spaced text, takes the average person 2-2.5 minutes to read aloud.
Dramatic Presentations: We will have a scene presented from most
plays we read on the day that play appears on the syllabus. Members of performance
groups (about 5 students each) will work together throughout the term to
hone their dramatic skills as comic actors by performing for LESS than 10
minutes (4-5 pp of text at most) on the day assigned. You must meet with your
performance group to select a scene and rehearse it. You do not have to memorize
the scripts, but you must show that you have read, understood and practiced
the scene before you perform it in class. Props, costumes and rehearsed stage
directions with adequate movement around the performance space make for the
most effective scene presentations. To accommodate your numbers you may involve
choral passages or choose multiple episodes between main characters. You
need not spend the entire ten minutes on one scene. These will be graded
on my assessment of the effort you appear to have put into your role and
the understanding you provide for your audience on the scene presented.
IMPORTANT REQUIREMENT:
In addition, we will all perform an edited, modernized production of Aristophanes'
Femme Phantasmagoria (Thesmophoriazousai), before a public audience
Thursday evening Nov. 4 in Ashby Parlor, and Saturday afternoon Nov. 6 for
a conference of classics scholars. We will rehearse for this perforrnance
during class hours, with a considerable extra time during the two weeks before
performance. I will make every accomodation possible for your schedule, but
the performance and adequate rehearsal attendance ARE REQUIRED. If you cannot
commit to several hours outside class at the end of the term, DO NOT take
this class.
Grade Distribution:
22% = Midterm Exam
23% = Final Exam
25% = Dramatic Presentation/Group Work (including rehearsal for public performance)
15% = 2 Oral Presentation Assignments 1 @ 10%, 1 @ 5%
15% = Class Participation/Discussion/Attendance
I must insist on a firm grading scale as follows:
97-100 A+ 93-96 A 90-92 A- 87-89 B+ 83-86 B 80-82 B- (and likewise down to the lowest passing gade of 60)
Improvement in writing and dramatic skills will be considered in your final grade.