What is the difference between tragedy and melodrama




















We was then able to see that from the art form it would let us see that we was not alone and we could express the pain in a more beautiful way. The Purpose of this Blog Your task on this blog is to write a brief summary of what we learned in class today. Wednesday, 21 September tragedy and melodrama. Tragedy and melodrama are two very different things, melodrama is very over dramatic and seems as if every problem has a way out, or a safety net, tragedy is described by aristotle as "inevitable", no chance of rescue, a spiral down into one's doom.

Anouille likened tragedy to a spring, possibly as a symbol of tension and bottling up emotions, to explosivley releasing them and release, or also that the spring has no beginning opr end, but just a continuous spiral. A tragedy is usually about a person in high esteem or power, falling because of a certain characteristic flaw, some examples of this are achilles ,who was dipped in the river styx, and his heel, which was a symbol of his arrogance, or MacBeth, once king of scotland, let down by his greed.

Tragedy can be many things, on one hand it could be the horrible act of death and suffering, but on the other it could be "an art form, to confront difficult human experiances" tragedy, according to aristotle, is a catharsis. Students 21 September at Students 22 September at Anonymous 25 September at Newer Post Older Post Home. Now, a drama abounding in romantic sentiment and agonizing situations, with a musical accompaniment only in parts which are especially thrilling or pathetic.

In opera, a passage in which the orchestra plays a somewhat descriptive accompaniment, while the actor speaks; as, the melodrama in the gravedigging scene of Beethoven's "Fidelio". Last seen by me on some wintry Sunday afternoon in the prepubescent early s, probably in the same post-prandial time-slot where I first encountered The Cockleshell Heroes, Carve Her Name With Pride and The Colditz Story — the dull roar of British postwar self-congratulation on film.

Tragedy Definition: n. With what terms do we describe horrific events? Some of the strongest come from literary tradition. When something unthinkable happens, when evil forces seem to be at work, when many innocent people die, and the subject is war, carnage, and threatened national identity, we call this spectacle a tragedy.

But we often use that word with little understanding of its history and meaning over time. The Oxford English Dictionary defines tragedy as "A play or other literary work of a serious or sorrowful character, with a fatal or disastrous conclusion: opp. A tragic hero, superhuman in his or her moral strength, infused with unusual daring and ambition, which the Greeks called "hubris," is shown, in the end, to have too much pride.

It is the deep flaw, or "hamartia," which, while making the hero great, also brings him or her into fatal conflict with the universe. Although Aristotle had in mind a specific body of plays that follow this tragic pattern, the term has become more flexible over the centuries, no longer limited to dramatic action on a stage.



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