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Showing posts from October, 2019

Catharsis

Catharsis from JahanviBrahmbhatt

The purpose

The porpose from JahanviBrahmbhatt

Tom Jones

The history of tom jones , a founding from JahanviBrahmbhatt

Character list of hamlet

Character list of hamlet from JahanviBrahmbhatt

Doctor Faustus is Tragic Hero

Doctor faustus is a tragic Hero       Doctor faustus play writer is Christopher marlowe. It's genre is a tragedy in 1967. Doctor  faustus in characters :           Dr. Faustus in character is fasut, Mephistopheles, good engel,  Bed angel, the devil, lechery, covetousness, Wagner and more.           Faustus is the protagonist and tragic hero of Marlowe’s play. He is a contradictory character, capable of tremendous eloquence and possessing awesome ambition, yet prone to a strange, almost willful blindness and a willingness to waste powers that he has gained at great cost. When we first meet Faustus, he is just preparing to embark on his career as a magician, and while we already anticipate that things will turn out badly (the Chorus’s introduction, if nothing else, prepares us), there is nonetheless a grandeur to Faustus as he contemp...

Robinson crusoe's journey

         Robinson  crusoe's journey              Daniel Defoe's famous novel was inspired by the true story of an 18th Century castaway, but the real Robinson Crusoe island bears little resemblance to its fictional counterpart.                Think of the island on which Robinson Crusoe is shipwrecked in Daniel Defoe's famous book and you're likely to think of a sun-drenched Caribbean idyll with sandy beaches and palm trees. In short, not a bad place to be shipwrecked.               But the island that supposedly inspired the book is nothing like that. It's in the Pacific, nearly 700km off the coast of Chile, and is frequently shrouded in mist.              ...

Six part of Tragedy

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Aristotle’s Poetics: Six Parts of Tragedy Aristotle provides a definition of tragedy that we can break up into seven parts: (1) it involves mimesis ; (2) it is serious; (3) the action is complete and with magnitude; (4) it is made up of language with the "aesthetic ornaments" of rhythm and harmony; (5) these "aesthetic ornaments" are not used uniformly throughout, but are introduced in separate parts of the work, so that, for instance, some bits are spoken in verse and other bits are sung; (6) it is performed rather than narrated; and (7) it arouses the emotions of pity and fear and accomplishes a catharsis (purification or purgation or tempering/moderation or satisfaction) of these emotions. Next, Aristotle asserts that any tragedy can be divided into six component parts, and that every tragedy is made up of these six parts with nothing else besides. There is (a) the spectacle (opsis) , which is the overall visual appearance of the stage and the actors. Th...