Criticism > Classical and Medieval Literature Criticism > Poetics - G. S. Brett (essay date 1922)
Poetics - G. S. Brett (essay date 1922)
G. S. Brett (essay date 1922)
SOURCE: "Reflections on Aristotle's View of Tragedy," in Philosophical Essays Presented to John Watson, Queen's University, 1922, pp. 158-78.
[In the following essay, Brett examines the concept of catharsis, or purgation, which Aristotle discusses in Poetics. Brett suggests that while Aristotle's definition of tragedy omits direct reference to purgation as experienced by an audience, the concept is still a significant part of his definition of tragedy.]
I
In all literature, ancient and modern, there are a few conspicuous passages which afford the perennial charm of mystery. Each generation of students looks on them, as Desire looks on the Sphinx; and one or another is drawn by magic into the maze of explanations which are the ghosts of former efforts. Such is the passage in which Aristotle once defined Tragedy, and if this essay achieves no final solution of the riddle, it may at least...
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Criticism
- John W. Draper (essay date 1921)
- G. S. Brett (essay date 1922)
- Lane Cooper (essay date 1923)
- Charles Sears Baldwin (essay date 1924)
- Marvin Theodore Herrick (essay date 1930)
- Humphrey House (essay date 1956)
- Humphrey House (essay date 1956)
- Laurence Berns (essay date 1964)
- Catherine Lord (essay date 1969)
- Norman Gulley (essay date 1979)
- Mark Packer (essay date 1984)
- Stephen Halliwell (essay date 1986)
- Deborah H. Roberts (essay date 1992)
- Further Reading
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