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  1. Tragedy - Theory, Catharsis, Aristotle: As the great period of Athenian drama drew to an end at the beginning of the 4th century bce, Athenian philosophers began to analyze its content and formulate its structure. In the thought of Plato (c. 427–347 bce), the history of the criticism of tragedy began with speculation on the role of censorship. To Plato (in the dialogue on the Laws) the state ...

  2. Aug 10, 2021 · Aristotle’s definition of tragedy: Aristotle states, “Tragedy is an imitation of an action that is serious, complex, and of a certain magnitude, in embellished language…arousing pity and fear…its catharsis of such emotion.” (Poetics, Aristotle). Read More: Aristotle’s concept of imitation and catharsis. In his definition of tragedy ...

  3. Sophocles’s Oedipus Tyrannos is a model tragedy for Aristotle because of the way it masterfully combines peripeteia (e.g., the messenger triggers a doomed series of events in the very act of allaying Oedipus’s fears), anagnorisis (in the devastating passage from ignorance to knowledge), and pathos understood as an action (and not just a ...

  4. Summary. Analysis. 4.1 Definition. According to Aristotle, tragedy “is an imitation of an action that is admirable, complete and possesses magnitude .”. Tragedy is written in “language made pleasurable” (meaning language that has rhythm and melody), and it can be separated into parts of verse or song. Tragedy is performed by actors, not ...

  5. In the Poetics, Aristotle's famous study of Greek dramatic art, Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) compares tragedy to such other metrical forms as comedy and epic.He determines that tragedy, like all poetry, is a kind of imitation (mimesis), but adds that it has a serious purpose and uses direct action rather than narrative to achieve its ends.

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  7. tragedy, I shall attempt to show that this interpretation accords with Aristotle's theory of tragedy as a whole. It is necessary to review the passages which embody the con-cept we are seeking. First, brief references to it (1448a 1-5, 16-18, b 24-27) in the early part of the Poetics introduce us in a general way to Aristotle's thought on the ...

  8. ARISTOTLE'S STUDY OF TRAGEDY*. HENRY ALONZO MYERS. Cornell University. HIs METHOD AND HIS AIM Among its procedures are the use of in-. The Poetics of Aristotle, which con- ductive reasoning, the analysis of speci- tains the best known definition of trag- mens into their constituent elements or. edy, has been more lavishly praised and parts, and ...

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