| hamartia |
"missing the mark"; the closest idea to "sin" or error--an error in judgment (from an archery term)
Ãâó: www.clt.astate.edu/wnarey/Genre%20Class/tragedy_te...
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| hamartia |
(hahm-mar-TEE-uh): according to Aristotle, an error of judgment that causes the downfall of a tragic protagonist. The concept is often identified with the tragic flaw or fatal weakness in character, such as the jealousy of Othello or the pride of Oedipus.
Ãâó: www.iolani.org/usacad_eng_eng10dterms_cw9404.htm
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| hamartia |
Greek term (which means "missing the mark") usually applied to the flaw or error in judgment that leads to the downfall of the tragic hero.
Ãâó: filmplus.org/thr/dic2.html
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| hamartia |
(GK 'error') Primarily, an error of judgement which may arise from ignorance or some moral shortcoming. Discussing tragedy and the tragic hero in Poetics, Aristotle points out that the tragic hero ought to be a man whose misfortune comes to him, not through vice or depravity, but by some error. For example: Oedipus kills his father from impulse, and marries his mother out of ignorance. Antigone resists the law of the state from stubbornness and defiance. ...
Ãâó: members.fortunecity.es/fabianvillegas/drama/glossa...
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| hamartia |
a tragic protagonist
Ãâó: www.english.uiuc.edu/lit_resources/English%20102/M...
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