Tragic ReliefOxford University Press, 1932 - 233 páginas |
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Página 28
... tragic drama . But tragedy is essentially a picture of unmerited suffering , ' the dancing - ground of divine accident ' . The essential point in a tragedy , according to Hegel , is not the suffering , but its cause , the action or ...
... tragic drama . But tragedy is essentially a picture of unmerited suffering , ' the dancing - ground of divine accident ' . The essential point in a tragedy , according to Hegel , is not the suffering , but its cause , the action or ...
Página 125
... tragic end . The opening circumstance of tragic drama is , no doubt , ' dramatic ' , and is some- thing that we scarcely , if at all , meet with in real life , but it is less extraordinary than the character of the person whom it ...
... tragic end . The opening circumstance of tragic drama is , no doubt , ' dramatic ' , and is some- thing that we scarcely , if at all , meet with in real life , but it is less extraordinary than the character of the person whom it ...
Página 179
... tragedy is thus only an expository supplement to the art of tragic drama . Drama is a democratic art designed to cater for a wide general public . It , therefore , seeks to assist the under- standing and imaginative perception of its ...
... tragedy is thus only an expository supplement to the art of tragic drama . Drama is a democratic art designed to cater for a wide general public . It , therefore , seeks to assist the under- standing and imaginative perception of its ...
Índice
PLEA | 1 |
PHILOSOPHICAL EXPOSITIONS OF TRAGIC PLEASURE | 12 |
THE SECRET OF TRAGIC PLEASURE | 34 |
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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