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Sunday, December 20, 2009

FW: Seneca and the Idea of Tragedy

 

 

Feed: FreeBookSpot Latest Books
Posted on: Friday, December 18, 2009 11:41 PM
Author: FreeBookSpot Latest Books
Subject: Seneca and the Idea of Tragedy

 


Seneca and the Idea of Tragedy By Gregory A. Staley * Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA * Number Of Pages: 200 * Publication Date: 2009-12-14 * ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0195387430 * ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780195387438 Product Description: As both a literary genre and a view of life, tragedy has from the very beginning spurred a dialogue between poetry and philosophy. Plato famously banned tragedians from his ideal community because he believed that their representations of vicious behavior could deform minds. Aristotle set out to answer Plato's objections, arguing that fiction offers a faithful image of the truth and that it promotes emotional health through the mechanism of catharsis. Aristotle's definition of tragedy actually had its greatest impact not on Greek tragedy itself but on later Latin literature, beginning with the tragedies of the Roman poet and Stoic philosopher Seneca (4 BC - AD 65). Scholarship over the last fifty years, however, has increasingly sought to identify in Seneca's prose writings a Platonic poetics which is antagonistic toward tragedy and which might therefore explain why Seneca's plays seem so often to present the failure of Stoicism. As Gregory Staley argues in this book, when Senecan tragedy fails to stage virtue we should see in this not the failure of Stoicism but a Stoic conception of tragedy as the right vehicle for imaging Seneca's familiar world of madmen and fools. Senecan tragedy enacts Aristotle Read more...


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