Aristotle: PoeticsUniversity of Michigan Press, 1967 - 124 páginas |
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Página 2
... Plato . Plato , Poetry , and the Academy Plato , unlike his brightest pupil , was a man obsessed , hounded , by poetry and poets all his life . Tradition says that he wrote dithyrambs and tragedies when he was very young , but destroyed ...
... Plato . Plato , Poetry , and the Academy Plato , unlike his brightest pupil , was a man obsessed , hounded , by poetry and poets all his life . Tradition says that he wrote dithyrambs and tragedies when he was very young , but destroyed ...
Página 3
... Plato felt in the great poets , and above all in Homer , the Homer of the Iliad , the pull of a way of life , a claim on the allegiance of men , a norm for living , which still had meaning and attractiveness for his contemporaries . Plato ...
... Plato felt in the great poets , and above all in Homer , the Homer of the Iliad , the pull of a way of life , a claim on the allegiance of men , a norm for living , which still had meaning and attractiveness for his contemporaries . Plato ...
Página 6
... Plato " imitation " had been a self - defeating , sterile activity , for Aristotle it is a positive and fruitful one — within its allowed limits . A similar peripety appears to overtake the emotions of pity and fear . Plato had seen ...
... Plato " imitation " had been a self - defeating , sterile activity , for Aristotle it is a positive and fruitful one — within its allowed limits . A similar peripety appears to overtake the emotions of pity and fear . Plato had seen ...
Términos y frases comunes
according action actors actually Aeschylus appears appropriate argument Aristotle Aristotle's beginning better called century character clause clear comedy complex composed composition course criticism dialogues discussion effect elements emotional epic episodes Euripides example expression fact foreign Further give Greek hand happens Hence Homer human iambic idea Iliad imitation important interpretation kind language later length less lines mean mentioned metaphor MICHIGAN moral nature noun Odyssey Oedipus omitted original particular passage pathos perhaps peripety persons phrase pity and fear Plato play pleasure plot poems Poetics poetry poets possible present probably produce question reason recognition reference respect seems sense sentence short simple single sound species speech stage stands story structure taken term theory things thought tion tragedy tragic translation trochaic turn utterance verbal verse whole