РефератыИностранный языкEnEntertainment And Education Essay Research Paper Both

Entertainment And Education Essay Research Paper Both

Entertainment And Education Essay, Research Paper


Both entertainment and education have been integrals parts of the human


experience since the beginnings of time. Many scholars insist that the two


institutions often serve jointly, with entertainers and entertainment


serving as a main source of education. There is little argument, then,


that in addition to generally appealing to the masses, entertainers have


regularly fulfilled the role of a teacher to typically unsuspecting


audiences. Entertainers have served as educators throughout history, from


the origins of oral narratives through the Middle Ages.


The earliest forms of unwritten communication were essentially


used to spread knowledge from one source to another. Religious disciplines


were the first information passed from person to person through


entertainment. In the third century B.C., Buddhist monks tried to win


converts outside India through the use of theater and song (Bur*censored* 97).


They taught the precepts of Siddhartha and Buddha in such theatrical epics


as Ramayana and Mahabharata, setting exacting rules for theater


performance in the process (Bur*censored* 99). Similarly, Irish monks


established singing schools, which taught uniform use of music throughout


the church (Young 31). Through chants which were all the same, they spread


identical teachings. Christian psalms and hymns in Apostolic times


were sung to spread the knowledge and faith of Christianity. In fact,


Christianity was promoted from the start by music. Churches were for long


the only centers of learning, with monks teaching all lessons through


music (Young 39). Through the use of sacred music, monks and clergy


successfully spread the teachings of their religions in a practical


manner.


Entertainers used the theater as a place to tell the stories of


the day, both fictional and topical. The African oral tradition was rich


in folk tales, myths, riddles, and proverbs, serving a religious, social,


and economic function (Lindfors 1). Likewise, Asian actors covered their


faces with masks in order to act out a scandal of the day without the


audience knowing who was passing along the gossip (Archer 76). European


puppets were another medium which permitted entertainers to spread current


gossip without revealing the identity of the storyteller (Speaight 16).


The theatrical productions of the Greeks further explored the use of


theater as an instructional tool. Because the theater provided such a


diverse forum for expression, stage actors and playwrights consistantly


utilized this locale to eduate the general public.


Oral communication was widely used to educate society about morals


and basic truths. The most highly developed theoretical discussions from


ancient times were those of he Greeks, who passed on this knowledge


through music and stories. Homer, the eighth-century B.C. poet, court


singer, and storyteller, embodied ideal Greek morals and heroic conduct in


his spoken epic, The Iliad (Beye 1). Homer and other poets used qualities


not found in written language to make the memorization of their works


easier so their sagas could be repeated for generations (Edwards 1).


African tribes people and Native Americans also instilled morals and


lessons to their communities through stories and fables (Edwards 1). These


oral narratives were soon after recorded on paper as early forms of


literature became prevalent.


Many of the thoughts previously expressed through oral


communication only could now be recorded for the future as writing became


wide-spread. The era of writing began with Chinese literature more than


3,500 years ago, as the Chinese recorded tales on oracle bones (Mair 1).


The Greeks, however, were the first known civilization to translate their


oral history into writing (Henderson 1). While the earliest Greek


literature was produced by the Indo-Europeans in 2,000 B.C., the most


essential works began in Ionia with the epics of Homer in the eighth


century B.C. (Henderson 7). This oral poetry is the foundation of Greek


literature, and epic poetry such as Boetian?s Hesiod explored the poet?s


role as a social and religious teacher (Henderson 8). These written works


clearly informed those who read them, but were not as successful in


educating the masses as the Greek dramas. Any spoken works that were


especially significant could now be transcribed for posterity and future


use.


Greek plays were also recorded on paper beginning around 500 B.C.,


reflecting issues of the day and entertaining audiences concurrently. The


tragedies of Euripides reflect political, social, and intellectual crisis.


Plays such as The Bacchae reflect the dissolution of common values of the


time, while other works criticized traditional religion or represented


mythical figures as unheroic (Segal 1). Each Greek drama was similarly


structured: problems were ?presented by the chorus, and resolved in purely


conventional–but always instructive–ways? (Bur*censored* 18). Topical comedies


reflected the heroic spirit, and problems facing Greek society during


times of great change (Henderson 2). Meanwhile, the dramas of Socrates


spoke about ethical and moral change, while Demosthenes? speeches hardened


Athenian opposition to Phillip of Macedon (Henderson 2). Similarly, the


Greek dramatist Aeschylus used his plays as a ?forum for resolving moral


conflicts and expressing a grandeur of thought !


and language? (Segal 1). Because all social classes of the community could


enjoy and understand the plays, Greek drama was a major force in educating


the public.


Following the onset of the second century, considerable movement


took place across Europe. Between 950 and 1350, the population of Western


Europe doubled (Lindsay 26-33). A shortage of teachers caused eager minds


to look elsewhere for education. Many of those traveling were instrumental


in spreading ideas, stories, and songs across the countryside. A new kind


of entertainer, the troubadours, served as the new commentators of the


day, successfully blending verse and music. Their poetry was the first to


?set about the conscious creation of a literary speech in the vernacular?


(Bogin 44). In songs called sirventes, the troubadours discussed current


affairs, politics, personalities, and scandals (Grunfield 25). Many


troubadour songs have texts referring to the Crusades of the fourteenth


century. Their crusading songs, such as those undoubtedly connected with


the campaign against the Arabs in Spain, brought political unrest to the


attention of the average citizen (Lindsay 61). Rog!


er II, however, protected Arab-speaking poets who rubbed shoulders with


his own Latin writers (Lindsay 44). Bertrand de Born became famous for


writing warmongering songs that ?stirred up barons and provoked kings into


<
p>going to war? (Grunfield 25). Walther von der Vogelwiede attained a unique


position among troubadours by transforming ?the short poem of proverbial


wisdom into a political weapon of satire and patriotism? (Hering 1).


Wandering troubadours sang most often about courtly love, but used their


unique form of entertainment to express concerns regarding social and


political topics to the general public.


Entertainers of the twelfth century also informed the public of


the principles of topics such as chivalry and religion. Troubadour Guilhem


de Poitou caused a sensation among friends and courtiers after writing


about love in a way that became the code for chivalry (Bogin 37-39). He


later spent a year among people of Antioch learning Arabic songs of Syria,


which he brought back to France (Lindsay 4). Poet Gerbert made


contributions to geometry, music theory, and arithmetic in his works which


customarily valued philosophy over prayer (Lindsay 45). The religious


songs of Martin Luther forced poets and scholars to take sides during the


Religious conflict of the Reformation (Hering 2). Luther?s chorale ?Ein?


feste Burge? became a national hymn during the reformation of the Catholic


church, encouraging followers to fight to worship in their own languages,


not the universally used Latin texts (Young 66). While the troubadours


were viewed primarily as entertainers who wandered aimless!


ly about the countryside singing about the virtues of courtly love, their


contribution as educators to the public cannot be mistaken.


As the troubadours slowly began to disappear, new kinds of


entertainers took their place, continuing to inform the general public


through different mediums. The meistersinger replaced the troubadour in


the late fourteenth century (Sebastian 2). Middle and lower class


meistersingers established schools for the cultivation of their craft,


ensuring a more structured form of entertainment than that of the


wandering troubadours (Sebastian 3). A famous early fifteenth-century


manuscript at the University of Heidelberg contains hundreds poems by the


most famous meistersingers as well as illustrations which are ?as


entertaining as they are instructive? (Young 44). John Wilbye represented


another new form of entertainer, the madrigalist, and provided studies of


English landscapes in the words and music of his madrigals (Young 71).


Again, there is a wealth of evidence to show that music was used


extensively to support the spread of religious belief. For example, King


David in the Cante!


rbury Psalter tells that ?musical sonorities? were introduced into the


service of the church (Young 46). Monteverdi?s opera L?Incoronazions di


Poppea educated audiences with its historical context and characters


(Young 77). The popularity of music remained dominant throughout the


Middle Ages, although writers began to entertain through the use of


written poetry as well.


European writers of the Middle Ages continued to comment on morals


and acceptable behavior through their works as their predecessors did


almost 2,000 years before. Hroswitha von Gandersheim, the first known


woman writer, was a nun who used the Roman playwright Terence as a model


for her morality plays (Hering 1). Dutch writer Jacob van Maerlant wrote


poems that showcased chivalry (Flaxman 1). Spanish playwright Lope de Vega


encouraged national patriotism and honor in his works that dealt with


dramatic conflicts and combined tragic and comedy elements (Gasset 3).


Calderon also stresses the Spanish code of honor in his masterpiece The


Mayor of Zalamea (Gasset 3). Later Francisco Gomez de Quevedo Y Villegas


wrote moral works in which he explored the decadence of Spain (Gasset 3).


Social concerns inspired the writings of Italian reformer Pietro Verri,


whose cynical interpretation of history established a new scientific


discipline


(Alvaro 1). His peer Leon Battista Alberti published On the Family, which


reflected the concerns Italians for social and ethical topics (Alvaro 1).


Still, other authors such as Prince Juan Manuel of Spain wrote such


seemingly simple tales as ?The Emperor?s New Clothes,? from which reader


could extract the moral lessons (Gasset 3). During this era, Europeans


were constantly discussing politics and social issues, prompted by the


opinions of writers who commented on the subjects.


Entertainers throughout history have undoubtedly served as


educators to the public, in addition to their conventional roles as


musicians or writers only. While a few performers sought only to amuse


with their acts, the majority of entertainers have crafted their art with


a deeper purpose in mind. Each who chose to address society?s problems and


speak to the general community through their art is as worthy an educator


as a modern-day college professor. Because many of the works of these


great artists were recorded on paper or passed down from generation to


generation through oral history, the insightful thoughts of these


entertainers continue to educate the public in the twenty-first century.


Jennifer Bender


AP English 4


November 22, 1996


Mr. Kile


The Role of Entertainers as Educators


Bender 9


9a9


Alvaro, Richard. ?Leon Battisa Alberti.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopedia. 1996 ed.


Archer, Katherine. ?Asian Literature.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopedia. 1996 ed.


Beye, Allan. ?The Iliad.? Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia.


1996 ed.


Bogin, Meg. The Women Troubadours. New York: Paddington Press,


1976.


Bur*censored*, Jacques. Theater. New York: Newsweek Books, 1974.


Edwards, Scott N. ?Homer.? Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. 1996


ed.


Flaxman, Jacob. ?Dutch Literature.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopedia. 1996 ed.


Gasset, John. ?Spanish Literature.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopedia. 1996 ed.


Grunfield, Frederic V. Music. New York: Newsweek Books, 1974.


Henderson, Florence. ?Greek Literature.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopedia. 1996 ed.


Hering, Jack. The Gypsies: Wanderers in Time. New York: Hawthorne


Press, 1969.


Lindfors, Sven. ?African Literature.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopia. 1996 ed.


Lindsay, Jack. The Troubadours and Their World. London: Frederick


Muller Limited, 1976.


Mair, Helen. ?Chinese Literature.? Grolier Multimedia


Encyclopedia. 1996 ed.


Bender 10


Sebastian, Gerald. Music In Time. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott


Co, 1952.


Segal, William. ?Greek Drama.? Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia.


1996 ed.


Speaight, George. Punch and Judy. Boston: Publishers Plays, Inc.,


1970.


Young, Percy M. A Concise History of Music from Primitive Times to


Present. New York: D. White Co., 1974.

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