Pity, Terror, and Peripeteia

In an article (C.Q. xli [1947], 73 ff.) based on an unpublished paper by Professor Cornford, Mr. I. M. Glanville returned to the suggestion that the words at the beginning of Chapter 11 of the Poetics (1452a23), which are part of the definition of peripeteia, refer back to the phrase (52a4), thereby...

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Veröffentlicht in:Classical quarterly 1962-05, Vol.12 (1), p.52-60
1. Verfasser: Lucas, D. W.
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description In an article (C.Q. xli [1947], 73 ff.) based on an unpublished paper by Professor Cornford, Mr. I. M. Glanville returned to the suggestion that the words at the beginning of Chapter 11 of the Poetics (1452a23), which are part of the definition of peripeteia, refer back to the phrase (52a4), thereby raising the question whose expectation it is to which events turn out contrary, that of the audience or of the characters in the play.
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source Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Audiences
Emotion
Emotional distress
Fear
Ions
Pity
Poetics
Theater
Tragic theater
Wordplay
title Pity, Terror, and Peripeteia
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