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Page 1: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

Aristotle’s Poetics

c. 335 BCE

(N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

Page 2: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

Imitation (Mimesis)

--its origins

--the psychology behind it

--the objects of imitation (men in action)

--the medium of imitation (rhythm, tune, meter)

--the manner of imitation (narration, action)

Page 3: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

Tragedy vs. Comedy

• Tragedy: represents men as better than they are. Is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in language embellished with each kind of artistic ornament; in the form of action, not narration; which prompts an excess of pity and fear necessary to the proper purgation of these emotions.

• Comedy: represents men as worse than they are; an imitation of characters of a lower type; deals not with the bad but with the ludicrous, reflecting some defect or ugliness that is not painful or destructive.

Page 4: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

The Six Elements of Tragedy• Plot: the soul of the drama, the arrangement of the incidents, the

action, to which all the other elements are subordinate

• Character: determines men’s qualities; that which reveals moral purpose. Four things to be aimed at: goodness, propriety, truthfulness to life, consistency.

• Thought: the faculty of saying what is possible and pertinent in

given circumstances; every effect produced by speech

• Diction: the expression of the meaning in words; the art of delivery

• Song: holds the chief place among the embellishments

• Spectacle: has an emotional attraction for the audience, but is the least artistic of the parts, since it derives not from the poet but from the machinist

Page 5: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

The Structure of the Plot

• Simple: the action is one and continuous with a change of fortune, but not reversal of the situation and without recognition

• Complex: a single, continuous action including-- Reversal of fortune (peripeteia): from good to bad-- Discovery (recognition): from ignorance to knowledge-- Scene of suffering (these 3 things involve surprise)-- Tragic irony: expectation vs. actual occurrence-- Unity: beginning, middle, end; logical, necessary sequence of

each scene-- Probability-- Temporal limitation: “Single revolution of the sun”

Page 6: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

The Structure of Tragedy

• Complication

• Unraveling or denouement

• Rising action, complication, climax (catastrophe), falling action, denouement

Page 7: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

Concept of the Tragic Hero

• Noble, but possessed of a tragic flaw (hamartia) that is his undoing

• Hybris (Hubris)

Page 8: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

What Happens to the Audience in Viewing a Tragedy

• Arousal of pity and fear– Pity: evoked by undeserved misfortune– Fear: that such misfortune can surely be

visited on ordinary people if it can be visited on a person of superior birth and position

• Catharsis

Page 9: Aristotle’s Poetics c. 335 BCE (N. B. Written approximately 100 years after Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex)

The Quantitative Parts of Tragedy

• Prologue

• Episode

• Exode

• Choric song—– Parode– Stasimon


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