Aristotle comedy and tragedy

    • [DOC File]Shakespeare's Plays: Tragedy

      https://info.5y1.org/aristotle-comedy-and-tragedy_1_c770c1.html

      Nov 26, 2012 · Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), includes a discussion of tragedy based in part upon the plays of Aeschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles. While Shakespeare probably did not know Greek tragedy directly, he would have been familiar with the Latin adaptations of Greek drama by the . Roman (i.e. Latin-language) playwright . Seneca

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    • [DOC File]ARISTOTLE & THE ELEMENTS OF TRAGEDY

      https://info.5y1.org/aristotle-comedy-and-tragedy_1_2b96b4.html

      Romantic tragedy disregarded the unities (as in the use of subplots), mixed tragedy and comedy, and emphasized action, spectacle, and--increasingly--sensation. Shakespeare violated the unities in these ways and also in mixing poetry and prose and using the device of a play-within-a-play, as in Hamlet.

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    • [DOC File]Tragedy and Comedy - Central Bucks School District

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      Tragedy Comedy Why are the popular distinctions unreliable? Review of Aristotle’s view below: Central features of tragedy: Explain each. The tragic hero is a man of noble stature. The tragic hero is good, though not perfect, and his fall results from his committing what Aristotle calls “an act of injustice.

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    • [DOC File]Let’s begin with what got me started on this: Aristotle’s ...

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      Aristotle has already made it clear that both tragedy and comedy are an imitation of life, in that it replicates or expresses the drama of a real event but of course, is not the event itself. I think of a photograph image as the visual still image being still the imitation of what it captures on film.

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle’s Poetics: Comedies and Tragedies

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      Aristotle’s Poetics: Comedies and Tragedies. Written 350 B.C.E; Translated by S. H. Butcher. Part I. I propose to treat of Poetry in itself and of its various kinds, noting the essential quality of each, to inquire into the structure of the plot as requisite to a good poem; into the number and nature of the parts of which a poem is composed; and similarly into whatever else falls within the ...

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    • [DOC File]Tragedy: The Basics

      https://info.5y1.org/aristotle-comedy-and-tragedy_1_04b627.html

      Aristotle distinguished six elements of tragedy: "plot, characters, verbal expression, thought, visual adornment, and song-composition." Of these, PLOT is the most important. The best tragic plot is single and complex, rather than double ("with opposite endings for good and bad"--a characteristic of comedy in which the good are rewarded and the ...

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle on Sophoclean Tragedy:

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      Aristotle the literary critic [Poetics, R 89-95] Systematization of Genres . Poetry includes: the Epic, Tragedy and Comedy. Literary Conventions and Rules of composition. Six Components of . Tragedy [R 90, definition]: representation of action and agents: “acting” Plot (the narrative ordering of incidents)

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle 'On Tragedy'

      https://info.5y1.org/aristotle-comedy-and-tragedy_1_431327.html

      Aristotle "On Tragedy" [This is a selection from Aristotle’s book called The Poetics.] Tragedy defined: “imitation of an action”: he is similar to Plato in that he says it is imitation, but makes it imitation of action not of character… “serious”: distinguishes Tragedy from Comedy

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