| catharsis |
the idea originated with the ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle, who believed that the experience of watching tragedy is cathartic, ie it purges the spectator of certain strong emotions. As a result mainly of experiments by Feshbach and Singer, this idea has been developed in media effects research. ...
Ãâó: www.cultsock.ndirect.co.uk/MUHome/cshtml/media/eft...
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| catharsis |
when therapy is thought of as "catharsis" is it thought as a way of emptying oneself of frustration and misery. If a person says that an experience is "cathartic," it means that pent up resentment or emotion was expressed and no longer demands the same expression. return
Ãâó: www.california.com/~rathbone/local2.htm
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| catharsis |
the emotional cleansing initiated by the tragic experience; for the character it is the recognition and acceptance of his or her error; for the audience, it is the sum total of the pity and fear created by the play.
Ãâó: filmplus.org/thr/dic1.html
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| catharsis |
The release of magickal energies at the height or climax of a ritual. Essentially the use of energy at the catharsis is the crux of the rite, determining whether its outcome will be successful or not.
Ãâó: www.spiritonline.com/dictionary/c.html
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| catharsis |
the ritual purpose of tragic drama. The tragic actions on the dramatic stage cause the audience to experience extreme feelings of pity and terror that causes a catharsis or release of these emotions. In other words,
Ãâó: www.english.uiuc.edu/lit_resources/English%20102/M...
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