The paper argues that catharsis in Aristotle's Poetics is a two-pronged process, which applies both to the construction of the mythos by the poet and its reception by the audience. Catharsis may plausibly be taken as the poet's distillation of events that constitute a mythos so as to clear...
ARISTOTLE'SPOETICS ACourseofEigktl/cftav^by^^ HUMPHRYHOUSE SENIORLECTURERINENGLISHLITERATURE ANDFELLOWOFWADHAMCOLLEGE,OXFORD revised,withapreface,by COLINHARDIE FELLOWANDCLASSICALTUTOROF MAGDALENCOLLEGE.OXFORD RUPERTHART-DAVIS 36SOHOSQUARELONDONWI
In fact the paper makes an attempt to make a comparative study of the concept of catharsis and theory of rasa, propounded by Aristotle and Bharata, in the Poetics and the Nātyasāstra, respectively. Aristotle has set forth his theory of drama, especially tragedy, in his small but ...
Brecht and other avant-garde artists assert non-Aristotelism and object to his theory of catharsis, organic unity and poetic justice. We must now take ... T Tozu - 美學 被引量: 0发表: 1970年 On the Poetics of Aristotle, its Meaning Today(Papers Read at the 21th National Congress) Bre...
The theory of comedy implicit in Aristotle's Poetics has been developed in fascinating ways by recent scholarship. This essay applies aspects of this work to Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, finding that the emotion of indignation, the plot device of the hoax, and the experience of catharsis ...
Aristotle's Poetics begins with the definition of imitation. He thinks that poet is a creator, not a mere recording device (imitator). He/she creates things and teaches us to see something in his creation that we never saw before. For Aristotle, imitatio
The Three Unities of Drama (Aristotle's Poetics) 19 related questions found What is Aristotle's concept of catharsis? Catharsis,the purification or purgation of the emotions (especially pity and fear)primarily through art. ... Aristotle states that the purpose of tragedy is to arouse “terror ...
Suffering is a destructive or painful action, which is often the result of a reversal or recognition. All three elements coalesce to create "catharsis," which is the engenderment of fear and pity in the audience: pity for the tragic hero's plight, and fear that his fate might befall us....
serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself; in language with pleasurable accessories, each kind brought in separately in the parts of the work; in a dramatic, not in a narrative form; with incidents arousing pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such emotions...
Miletus. He was the first of a group of thinkers, grouped under the label of Pre-Socratics, who theorized about the origins of the universe from a non-religious perspective. The ideas of later philosophers, particularly Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, deeply influenced centuries of philosophical ...