Tragic ReliefOxford University Press, 1932 - 233 páginas |
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Página 30
... suggest that tragedy was a sort of hospital for curing patients suffer- ing from a morbid excess of pity and fear ? We would suggest that this pathological interpretation of Aristotle's theory is unsound . It seems to us that Aristotle ...
... suggest that tragedy was a sort of hospital for curing patients suffer- ing from a morbid excess of pity and fear ? We would suggest that this pathological interpretation of Aristotle's theory is unsound . It seems to us that Aristotle ...
Página 36
... suggest , the production of a subtle double impres- sion . Every great tragedy is , as it were , a play within a ... suggested to the imagination - the intangible forces operating within - is essentially the creation of poetic art ...
... suggest , the production of a subtle double impres- sion . Every great tragedy is , as it were , a play within a ... suggested to the imagination - the intangible forces operating within - is essentially the creation of poetic art ...
Página 128
... suggest that here , too , the same principle of a subtle double im- pression is employed . The caprice of chance , that throws the tragic hero into a situation with an infinite poten- tiality for mischief for him in particular , suggests ...
... suggest that here , too , the same principle of a subtle double im- pression is employed . The caprice of chance , that throws the tragic hero into a situation with an infinite poten- tiality for mischief for him in particular , suggests ...
Índice
PLEA | 1 |
PHILOSOPHICAL EXPOSITIONS OF TRAGIC PLEASURE | 12 |
THE SECRET OF TRAGIC PLEASURE | 34 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
action appear Aristotle attempt audience avenger brings called cause chapter character circumstance comedy comic common course crime death deed device Dick distinctive double impression effect element Elizabethan entire essential exceptional expression external fact fate father fear feel forces ghost give Hamlet hand hesitancy horror human husband impression incident indicate inner internal conflict introduction killed kind King Lear live look lyrical Macbeth manner meet merely mind murder namely nature Nora Othello outer pain passion picture pity play pleasure plot poetic poetry presented principle produce Professor regard represented revenge says scene seems seen sense serves Shakespeare shock situation soliloquies sorrow spirit stage struggle suffering suggest supernatural sway theme theory things thought thrown tion tragedy tragic drama tragic dramatist tragic hero tragic relief turn ultimate wife