Get Free Shipping on orders over $49
Aristotle on Dramatic Musical Composition : The Real Role of Literature, Catharsis, Music and Dance in the POETICS - Gregory L. Scott

Aristotle on Dramatic Musical Composition

The Real Role of Literature, Catharsis, Music and Dance in the POETICS

By: Gregory L. Scott

Paperback | 16 August 2018 | Edition Number 2

At a Glance

Paperback


$88.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $22.19 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 10 business days

This book revolutionizes the 1000-year old tradition that stems from the first commentaries on the Poetics by the Arabic scholars. (No commentary exists from antiquity or Byzantine times.) Starting with those scholars, Aristotle's treatise has always been thought to be about poetic-literary theory, with tragedy being its paradigm. Scott demonstrates, however, that Aristotle (c. 384-322 BCE) employs poiesis not in the way universally assumed until now, as "poetry," which the sophist Gorgias only coined in 415 BCE. Rather, Aristotle follows Diotima, who in the Symposium of Plato (c. 424-347) explains poiesis as mousike kai metra (typically "'music' and verses" but better "music-dance and verses"). One reason Aristotle employs the Diotiman and not the Gorgian sense of poiesis is that not one poem exists in the so-called "Poetics"; another reason is that the definition of tragedy includes music and dance (rhuthmos).

Scott subsequently demonstrates that Aristotle considers tragedy not to be a species of literature but one of dramatic musical theater that also requires dance and spectacle. Chapter 2 includes a revised version of Scott's "The Poetics of Performance" (Cambridge University Press, 1999).

The book also supplements his arguments of "Purging the Poetics" (Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 2003), reprinted here as Chapter 5, providing the additional reasons why Aristotle could not have written the clause with the words catharsis, pity, and fear in the definition of tragedy, as a number of internationally known ancient Greek specialists have already been accepting. As part of his reasons, Scott shows that, despite their recent, very admirable paleography, Leonardo Tar n and Dmitri Gutas too often mangle the philosophical interpretations and even some of the philology regarding the "musical" terms, especially when they try to sweep the problems of catharsis under the rug. Also, Tar n and Gutas never even recognize the Diotiman sense of poiesis that Aristotle uses, nor do they recognize the philosophical contradictions with keeping the katharsis-clause.

All of this allows a fresh and better reading of the treatise that even with its fundamental misinterpretations has been a major part of the foundation of Western literary, dramatic and artistic theory.

UPDATES & ERRATA: www.epspress.com/ADMCupdates.html

Contents

Volume 1 includes: Plato's meanings of poiesis as "music-dance and verse" and his use of rhuthmos often not as "rhythm" but "dance"; the importance of dance in the state for Plato; Aristotle's agreement with his mentor on the meaning of the musical terms and the requirement of dance not only in the Poetics but in the Politics, along with the proof that Aristotle considers tragedy to be a species of dramatic "musical" art, not literature. 364 pages. List: Hardcover $68; Softcover $48.

Volume 1 is available at www.amazon.com/dp/0999704923

Volume 2 (this book) includes the issues of catharsis, pity, and fear, and a complete rebuttal of the only attempted rigorous reply (by Stephen Halliwell in Between Ecstasy and Truth, 2011) to "Purging the Poetics." This volume also contains: Aristotle's response to Plato without catharsis; comedy; whether or not the principles of "musical" dramatic theater can be applied to art forms like literature and cinema; the history of the Poetics with regards to the two fundamental misconceptions; Bibliography; and Index for both volumes.

More in Philosophy & Aesthetics

In Praise of Shadows and Other Essays - Junichiro Tanizaki

RRP $27.99

$24.75

12%
OFF
Bluets - Maggie Nelson

Hardcover

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
The Joyous Science : Penguin Classics - Friedrich Nietzsche

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
The Beauty of Everyday Things : Penguin Modern Classics - Soetsu Yanagi
The Practice - Seth Godin

Paperback

RRP $32.99

$26.99

18%
OFF
The Symposium : Penguin Classics - Plato

RRP $26.99

$19.99

26%
OFF
Color Charts : A History - Anne Varichon

RRP $89.99

$68.75

24%
OFF
Philosophy of the Home : Domestic Space and Happiness - Emanuele Coccia
Glasses : Object Lessons - Adam Geczy

$30.75

Poetics : Penguin Classics - Aristotle

RRP $26.99

$20.75

23%
OFF
Fist : Object Lessons - nelle (Freelance writer, Philadelphia, USA) mills

$31.99

Distinction : A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste - Pierre Bourdieu
Why Sound Matters : Why X Matters Series - Damon Krukowski

RRP $39.95

$31.75

21%
OFF
Design as Art : Penguin Modern Classics - Bruno Munari

RRP $26.99

$20.75

23%
OFF
Semiotics : The Basics - Daniel Chandler

$29.99

Maison ko in-sook - Insook Ko

$53.99

Baudelaire's Objects - Professor Joseph  Acquisto

RRP $180.00

$159.75

11%
OFF
Routledge Revivals : Routledge Revivals - T. H. Pear

RRP $62.99

$60.99

Henry James and the Question of Living - Dr. Patrick  Jones

RRP $180.00

$159.75

11%
OFF
The Feminist Film Philosophy Reader - Lucy  Bolton