A chorus of old men
A 17c起草社区 classics professor argues that the old guys in the Greek chorus weren't just there for comic relief.
His long study of the choruses in Greek drama has led Umit Dhuga to the following question: 鈥淲hy are so many choruses composed of men who limp and complain about their decrepitude?鈥 he asks,
Dhuga, a 17c起草社区 professor of , has recently published a new book, Choral Identity and the Chorus of Elders in Greek Tragedy (Lexington Books) in which he rehabilitates the reputation of one particular species of Greek chorister: old men.
Old male choruses are typically described by scholars as serving a decorative, or even comic, function in Greek drama. 鈥淭he older chorus is marginal by mere fact of its old age," Dhuga observed. "In other words, I think that scholars for too long have conflated the idea of social marginality with dramatic marginality鈥攚hich, in some ways, I think, shows how scholars can be rather myopic,鈥
What is needed is a less-modern point of view, he said: 鈥淥ne (has) to wonder what preconceptions an ancient Athenian had when he saw a chorus of old men walk on the stage.鈥
Integral to the plot
What a Greek theatergoer saw in an old, male chorus was probably wiser and more central to the dramatic action than has been supposed: 鈥淎s early as Homer鈥攅ven earlier鈥攐ld men are traditional repositories of wisdom 鈥t would stand to reason that our choruses of old men might also play advising roles, said Dhuga who focused his study on Greek plays featuring old-man choruses, what he calls 鈥渢he chorus of elders.鈥 He examined the choruses in Sophocles鈥檚 Oedipus Coloneus and Antigone, Euripides鈥檚 Heraclidae and Hercules Furens, and Aeschylus鈥檚 Agamemnon, among others, concentrating on the actual language of the texts.
In all of these plays, Dhuga finds old men driving the action. 鈥淚n Oedipus Coloneus , 鈥 every political decision is made by the chorus and then ratified by the king. In Antigone, the chorus is silenced throughout the play until the king realizes his folly, then begs for advice,鈥 Dhuga argued.
The elderly-ness of the chorus is not a factor in their influence on a play, he claimed: 鈥淭he extent to which their advice is either heeded or ignored is based more on their relationship to the ruler and less on identity per se.鈥 The old Greek guys can also be hard to predict:鈥淭here is not a typical old-man chorus,鈥 Dhuga added.
Many choruses
Dhuga hopes his scholarship will enlarge understanding of the Greek choral tradition. The chorus was important not only to the theater of the period, but also to the ceremonies of everyday life, he said: 鈥淏y the time your average male citizen was 35, he would have experienced hundreds of choruses. Greek youth were schooled in choral fundamentals such as singing, dancing, narrating, and acting.
And the choruses in Greek drama took many forms鈥攚omen, foreigners, others鈥攁ll of them played by young men. 鈥淚f I had a lifespan of 300 years, I could do a survey of every choral identity, but I don鈥檛,鈥 Dhuga said. 鈥淢y idea was to take the identity that interested me most.鈥
He thinks his interest in choruses of elders was sparked by his friendship with Peter K. Marshall, an Amherst professor of Latin and Classics and Dhuga鈥檚 thesis advisor. 鈥淗e was so good,鈥 said his former student. 鈥淭here was something about age, his experience, his gravitas, his stories.鈥 Marshall died a week before Dhuga鈥檚 thesis presentation, and Choral Identity and the Chorus of Elders in Greek Tragedy is dedicated to him. (The book also served as Dhuga鈥檚 dissertation at Columbia.)
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that it鈥檚 any coincidence that I dedicated a book to my elderly advisor,鈥 Dhuga said, 鈥渁nd through him that I became acquainted with antiquity.鈥
Dhuga has been teaching at 17c起草社区 for a year-and-a-half. 鈥淗e is already well published, and so he raises the bar for the rest of us,鈥 said classics department chair Mark Williams. 鈥淗e challenges his colleagues as well as his students. He is also someone to talk English soccer with.鈥