As Aristotle says, "Tragedy is an
imitation not of human beings but of action, life, happiness, and
unhappiness." Very few of the great
tragedies could possibly be based in reality.
For instance, how likely is it that a great king once discovered that he
killed his father and married his mother in real life. The purpose of this tragedy is to show the
downfall of a great leader. This
includes action, life, happiness, and unhappiness just as Aristotle says. Who would want to
read something about a person
that bad things happen to if the reader does not understand why it happens and
the reason for the reaction?
Another example would be Antigone. It was not written to watch a woman bury her
brother and have everyone around her die.
The purpose is to gain insight on the human way of life. The story tells of duty and honor, not of
death and politics. We are made to care
about not necessarily Antigone herself, but her cause. That is what makes a great tragedy.
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