Aristotle did believe that an audience experienced catharsis when watching a tragedy. Catharsis is a process of release and in watching a tragedy an audience is able to get relief from emotions.
When actors delivered soliloquys on the Elizabethan stage, it is believed that they made eye contact with the audience and spoke directly to them, thus engaging the audience in the character's inner dialogues. The fourth wall convention was not as firm as it later came to be.
The theatre during Shakespeare's time was considered to be highly unmoral. It was believed that attending a performance at a theatre would keep people from attending church. Theatres were not quiets places like they are today. Many members of the audience would jeer the performers and crime was often an issue.
Poetic reason was a subject of great debate in ancient philosophy, less so today. Many ancients believed the only way to true knowledge or any furthering of existing knowledge could only be done by means of logical, formulaic, syllogistic reasoning. I believe it was Aristotle who suggested that "thinking outside the box" or poetic reasoning could be as or more effective in some situations. I believe most who valued poetic reasoning believed that the combination of creativity and emotions helped the mind to see farther than logic alone could. Hope this helps!
the audience know that Macbeth is goin to become the thane of cawdor however Macbeth does not know that he has given this title.
Heighten their interest, increase their appreciation and reinforce their beliefs are the effects that the superstitious nature of the audience at the time had on their appreciation of "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, audiences during the ancient Greek dramatist's lifetime believed in a universe dominated by the gods and ruled by fate. They could feel themselves immediately being drawn into Theban King Oedipus' experiences with destiny. Additionally, they too knew what it was like to live in cities where important decisions were made by kings in consultation with oracles, prophets and sacrifices.
Catharsis is the emotional release and purification that Aristotle believed the audience experienced when watching a tragedy. By witnessing the downfall of the tragic hero, the audience is able to release emotions like pity and fear, leading to a sense of emotional cleansing and renewal.
Aristotle believed that people experienced an emotional release by sympathizing with the characters in a tragedy. This release is known as catharsis.
Aristotle believed that audiences experienced catharsis when watching a tragedy. Catharsis is the purging of strong emotions, such as pity and fear, which leads to a sense of emotional release or renewal.
Aristotle believed that literature, especially poetry, relied on both mimesis (imitation) and catharsis. Mimesis refers to the imitation of human emotions and actions in literary works, while catharsis refers to the purging or cleansing of these emotions in the audience through the experience of the literary work. Aristotle believed that poetry could evoke catharsis, leading to emotional release and purification in the audience.
Aristotle believed that poetry and all arts, including theatre, serve to educate and inspire the audience by presenting a reflection of human nature and society. Through these art forms, people can experience catharsis, or the purging of emotions, which leads to moral and intellectual growth. Aristotle saw the arts as playing a valuable role in shaping a virtuous and well-rounded society.
Aristotle believed that it is the unmerited misfortune of the tragic hero that arouses feelings of pity and fear in the viewer, leading to catharsis—an emotional release or purification that brings about a sense of relief and renewal.
Aristotle believed that the audience would identify with the tragic hero if they were of intermediate moral standing, where they exhibit both good and bad qualities. This balance allows the audience to see elements of themselves in the character's struggles and flaws, making the tragic hero's downfall more relatable and impactful.
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Aristotle was a famous critic of some of Plato's views, particularly his theory of forms and his skepticism towards empirical knowledge. Other contemporaries and later philosophers also challenged various aspects of Plato's philosophy.
Catharsis is a Greek literary term that refers to purging or releasing your emotions, and it carries the connotation of feeling better once those emotions are let out. The ancient Greeks believed that art and literature were important to a society because they provided the audience with catharsis-- a tragic play might cause members of the audience to have a good cry, for example. These days, music can be a catharsis (many of us, when we are having a bad day, will listen to some songs we like and sing along with them); so can watching a movie, playing video games, going swimming, and going to a concert.
Aristotle in "Poetics" defined character as the moral or ethical qualities of an individual. He believed that characters in a play should exhibit certain traits such as goodness, appropriateness, and consistency in order to engage the audience. Aristotle emphasized the importance of characters' actions and decisions in driving the plot forward and creating emotional impact on the audience.
Aristotle believed that the audience would identify with a tragic hero if they were neither too virtuous or too evil. He believed that if they went too far to either side the common person wouldn't be able to identify with them.