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catharsis an emotional purging or cleansing experienced by an ancient Greek audience at the end of a tragedy
Ãâó: wps.ablongman.com/wps/media/objects/130/133428/glo...
catharsis is the emptying, cleansing, purging or evacuation of the bowels (intestines).
Ãâó: www.ilpi.com/msds/ref/catharsis.html
catharsis ?he term originated in the Poetics of Aristotle.?According to 18 th c. tragedy purifies the spectator by increasing his natural and good capacity for pitying by exercising his sensibilities.?In the 19 th c. Goethe said Aristotle meant the reconciling adjustment of fear and pity within the play?Shipley 39).
Ãâó: english.montclair.edu/isaacs/605LitResearch/literm...
catharsis according to Aristotle, the purging of pity and fear that tragedy causes in viewers.
Ãâó: www.iolani.org/usacad_eng_eng10dterms_cw9404.htm
catharsis According to Aristotle, as interpreted by Freud and Lacan, catharsis (as found, for example, in the tragedies of Sophocles) produces a pleasurable calm by exciting the emotions, homeopathically one might say.
Ãâó: method.vtheatre.net/dict.html
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