Year 8
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Lesson details
Key learning points
- In this lesson, we will learn about how a hero can also be tragic. We will discover why all of Shakespeare's tragedies contain heroes with some fairly major psychological problems.
Licence
This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.
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5 Questions
Q1.
What happens in a tragedy?
A story lasts for 7 days
There is a big festival
There is a god called Dionysus
Q2.
What was Dionysia
A type of wine in Athens
The name of a Greek playwright
The prize for writing a good play
Q3.
Which of the following was NOT one of Aristotle's three unities?
Action
Place
Time
Q4.
What is catharsis?
Being happy at the end of a story
Fear
Sadness
Q5.
Which statement is true?
Shakespeare didn't write any tragedies.
Shakespeare's tragedies were exactly the same as Greek tragedies.
The Greeks watched Shakespeare's tragedies and copied them.
5 Questions
Q1.
What do we call the main character in a tragedy?
Hero
Oedipus
Protagonist
Q2.
Which statement is correct?
Hamartia is always a flaw.
Hamartia is always an error.
Hamartia is when someone dies at the end of a tragedy.
Q3.
A Greek tragic hero's hamartia is usually...
A death
A downfall
A flaw
Q4.
A Shakespearean tragic hero's hamartia is usually...
A death
A downfall
An error
Q5.
Which is NOT an example of a flaw?
Being too ambitious
Jealousy
Not listening to other people