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Tragedy and Dramatic Form

Tragedy has been the most theorized of dramatic genres since Aristotle, posing perennial questions about suffering, fate, and the form's capacity to survive into a modern, secular age. Its comparative study links ancient, Renaissance, and modern drama across cultures.

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Definition

The comparative study of tragedy and other dramatic forms, addressing their defining features, the experience they produce, and their historical transformations from antiquity to the present.

Scope

Examines tragedy and dramatic form comparatively: Aristotle's founding analysis of tragic plot, catharsis, and the unities; Nietzsche's account of the Apollonian and Dionysian; and the modern debate over whether tragedy can persist in a world without shared metaphysical order. Concerns the theory and history of dramatic genres across literatures.

Core questions

  • What defines tragedy as a dramatic form, and what effect is it meant to produce?
  • What is catharsis, and how does tragic pleasure arise from depicted suffering?
  • Can tragedy survive in a modern, secular, or democratic world?
  • How do dramatic forms and conventions vary and travel across cultures?

Key theories

Aristotelian poetics of tragedy
Aristotle analyzed tragedy as the imitation of a serious action, structured by plot, reversal, and recognition, producing catharsis of pity and fear in the audience.
Apollonian and Dionysian
Nietzsche located the birth of Greek tragedy in the fusion of Apollonian form and Dionysian intoxication, reading tragedy as a metaphysical response to suffering.
Modern tragedy
Williams argued against the claim that tragedy belongs only to aristocratic or religious worldviews, defending the possibility of genuinely modern, social tragedy.
The death of tragedy
Steiner contended that authentic tragedy depended on a shared sense of cosmic order that modern secular rationalism has dissolved, so that true tragedy has become impossible.

History

Tragic theory begins with Aristotle's Poetics and the Greek stage, is transmitted through neoclassical doctrine such as the unities, and is radically reconceived by Nietzsche's 1872 The Birth of Tragedy. The mid-twentieth century debate over tragedy's modern survival pitted Steiner's 1961 Death of Tragedy against Williams's 1966 Modern Tragedy, framing the comparative discussion of the genre's persistence.

Debates

Is modern tragedy possible?
Whether tragedy requires a shared metaphysical or religious order now lost (Steiner) or can take new, social and secular forms in modernity (Williams).

Key figures

  • Aristotle
  • Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Raymond Williams
  • George Steiner

Related topics

Seminal works

  • aristotelianpoetics1996
  • nietzsche1872
  • steiner1961
  • williams1966

Frequently asked questions

What is catharsis?
In Aristotle's Poetics, catharsis is the clarification or purgation of pity and fear that tragedy arouses in its audience. Its precise meaning has been debated for centuries, but it names the characteristic emotional effect of the tragic form.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts