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anagnorisis

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anagnorisis

anagnorisis   Reference library

The Companion to Theatre and Performance

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2010
Subject:
Performing arts, Theatre
Length:
164 words

In *Aristotle's Poetics, anagnorisis (recognition) refers to a change in the *protagonist from ignorance to knowledge, leading to happiness (...

anagnorisis

anagnorisis   Reference library

Ronald W. Vince

The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2005
Subject:
Performing arts, Theatre
Length:
162 words

In Aristotle's Poetics, anagnorisis (recognition) refers to a change in the protagonist from ignorance to knowledge, leading to happiness (...

Aristotelian

Aristotelian  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
[a‐ris‐tŏ‐tee‐li‐ăn]Belonging to or derived from the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384–322 bce), the most important of all ancient philosophers in his influence on medieval science and ...
climax

climax  

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Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
1. A moment in a narrative when the conflict and tension peak for the audience. Often synonymous with crisis.2. The third phase of dramatic structure in Freytag's pyramid.3. Climax order: a ...
crisis

crisis  

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Overview Page
The ultimate turning point in a narrative structure when resolution is imminent. Usually synonymous with the emotional climax. See also classical narrative structure.
deus ex machina

deus ex machina  

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Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(Latin, god from the machine)The phrase refers to the theatrical device whereby a supernatural agency is introduced to solve the dramatic situation; hence, any artificial, introduced, external, and ...
discovery

discovery  

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Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
A term sometimes used as an English equivalent for anagnorisis, that is, a point in a play or story at which a character recognizes the true state of affairs. See also dénouement.
origins of theatre

origins of theatre  

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Overview Page
The ‘ritual theory of origin’, itself of nineteenth-century origin and first proposed in scientific guise by the Cambridge School of Anthropology, swiftly became a commonplace even beyond the circles ...
peripeteia

peripeteia  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
[pe-ri-pĕ-tee-ă][pe-rip-ĕti])A sudden reversal of a character's circumstances and fortunes, usually involving the downfall of the protagonist in a tragedy, and often coinciding with the ‘recognition’ ...
scène à faire

scène à faire  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
[sen a fair]A French term for the kind of scene within a drama towards which the preceding action seems inevitably to tend, such as the crucial encounter between hero and villain. It usually provides ...

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