Poetics and Genre Theory
Poetics and genre theory examine the formal principles of dramatic composition and the systems by which plays are classified into genres such as tragedy, comedy, and their many subtypes.
Definition
The study of the formal principles of dramatic composition and the classification and theory of dramatic genres.
Scope
This topic covers classical poetics from Aristotle and Horace, the neoclassical codification of the dramatic unities and decorum, and modern theories of genre as historically shifting and mixed categories. It addresses how genres are defined, how they function as horizons of expectation for audiences, and how dramatic kinds—tragedy, comedy, tragicomedy, melodrama, farce—emerge, blend, and transform across periods.
Core questions
- What formal elements define a dramatic work according to classical poetics?
- How are dramatic genres defined and distinguished?
- Are genres fixed kinds or historically changing conventions?
- How do mixed and hybrid genres arise and function?
Key concepts
- mimesis
- plot and the unities
- decorum
- horizon of expectation
- genre and mode
- tragicomedy
Key theories
- Aristotelian elements of drama
- Aristotle's identification of the six parts of tragedy—plot, character, thought, diction, melody, spectacle—with plot as the soul of the drama, providing the foundational vocabulary of dramatic poetics.
- Modal theory of genres
- Northrop Frye's archetypal scheme organizing literary and dramatic genres into recurring modes and mythoi, treating comedy, tragedy, romance, and irony as structural patterns.
History
Classical poetics established the analysis of dramatic form and genre, refined in Horace's Ars Poetica and the neoclassical theorists who derived the three unities; later criticism, from Romantic challenges to neoclassical rules through Frye's archetypal system and reception-oriented genre theory, reconceived genres as historically variable and audience-dependent rather than fixed.
Debates
- Prescriptive versus descriptive genre theory
- Theorists debate whether genres set normative rules that works should obey, as in neoclassicism, or are descriptive groupings that change as new works reshape them.
Key figures
- Aristotle
- Horace
- Northrop Frye
- Marvin Carlson
Related topics
Seminal works
- aristotlepoetics
- frye1957
- horace2008
Frequently asked questions
- What are the three unities?
- They are the neoclassical principles of unity of action, time, and place—largely derived from and elaborated beyond Aristotle—holding that a play should present a single action occurring in roughly one day and one location.
- Why do genres matter for drama?
- Genres shape how playwrights compose and how audiences interpret and respond, providing shared conventions and expectations that works can fulfill, subvert, or recombine.