|
This is just a FREE sample preview of the essay
Subscribe to Essay Galaxy for instant access to view the entire paper
Essay Galaxy - Aristotles The Poetics
In Aristotle's The Poetics, tragedy is stated as being "an imitation not only of a complete action but, also of incidents arousing pity and fear (137)." As Agamemnon, one of the works of Aeschylus, begins, pity is immediately brought into play. Although the audience does not see it, Agamemnon makes a difficult decision. He is a great leader and must make a sacrifice to please the Gods in order for them to produce the wind he needs to continue his voyage. Agamemnon's dilemma is that he must sacrifice his daughter Iphigeneia. He would be doing so for the good of the state. It is his duty to save and protect his people. He puts the state above his personal interests and makes the sacrifice and the reader (audience) immediately feels pity for Iphigeneia and Agamemnon. Iphigeneia was a young innocent child that did nothing to deserve death. Aeschylus makes ....
|
|
Number Of Pages: 4 |
Number Of Words: 953 |
Got a term paper due soon and need some help quick? You have come to the right place. Essay
Galaxy has over 50,000 essays, papers, and reports available for download right now! Get
ideas from thousands students just like you to help make that essay perfect. Don't hesitate.
Join today and get instant access to our enormous database.
|
Membership Options |
Price |
Savings |
|
1 month subscription |
$19.95 recurring |
* |
3 months subscription |
$39.95 recurring |
$19.90 |
6 months subscription |
$69.95 non-recurring |
$49.75 |
|
|
Credit card and check processing is provided by PayPal and is 100% safe and secure
|