The Tragic PlaneWhat constitutes tragedy? This study examines some of the world's greatest tragic dramas and tries to discover what elements produce a tragic effect. Mason here contends that the effect cannot be properly described in the terms used by philosophers, psychologists, or theologians: tragedy occurs on its own plane on which the characters in the plays are seen at once as agents and pasive sufferers in an action where the human and the divine come together in a unique way to produce the tragic act. |
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Page 81
... victim of this disaster . Maiden , come from the house with us . You have seen a terrible death and agonies , many and strange , and there is nothing here which is not Zeus . " 8 But I think that we are meant to understand that the play ...
... victim of this disaster . Maiden , come from the house with us . You have seen a terrible death and agonies , many and strange , and there is nothing here which is not Zeus . " 8 But I think that we are meant to understand that the play ...
Page 98
... victim . The silence of the first few seconds in the darkened room where two naked lovers stand face to face for the first time in their lives and dare not make a move . The silence which falls on the crowd cheering the victor . It's ...
... victim . The silence of the first few seconds in the darkened room where two naked lovers stand face to face for the first time in their lives and dare not make a move . The silence which falls on the crowd cheering the victor . It's ...
Page 136
... victims ' , as we called the soldiers and sailors of the First World War , and that we were ready to feel for the vaster numbers of the real victims of that war and its immediate aftermath . No young person to - day can have missed ...
... victims ' , as we called the soldiers and sailors of the First World War , and that we were ready to feel for the vaster numbers of the real victims of that war and its immediate aftermath . No young person to - day can have missed ...
Contents
The Unity and Ambiguity of Tragedy | 1 |
Tragic Figures | 19 |
Tragic Bonds | 40 |
Copyright | |
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Achilles action actor Aeschylus Agamemnon Antigone argument Aristotle Aristotle's ātē Benveniste blood bond bring c'est Cassandra chapter Chorus claim conviction critics D. H. Lawrence death Deianeira divine dramatic Erinys essay essence of Tragedy Euripides expression eyes F. R. Leavis fact fate father feeling fiction forces give gods Greek plays Greek tragedy hamartia Hamlet haue hear heaven Hecuba Heracles hero Homer hope human Iliad Lesky literary Macbeth mind moral mystery nature never novel Oedipus at Colonus Oedipus the King oracles Othello passage passion pathos phrase poem Poetics poets present Priam Pyrrhus reader religion religious remark response scene seems sense Shakespeare Sophocles soul speech stage suffering things thought tirade tout tragic act tragic figure tragic plane Trojan truth universe Vernant victim W. B. Yeats whole Women of Trachis words Zeus