Poetics
Poetics
Summary
Aristotle proposes to study poetry by analyzing its constitutive parts and then
drawing general conclusions. The portion of the Poetics that survives discusses
mainly tragedy and epic poetry. We know that Aristotle also wrote a treatise on
comedy that has been lost. He defines poetry as the mimetic, or imitative, use of
language, rhythm, and harmony, separately or in combination. Poetry is mimetic in
that it creates a representation of objects and events in the world, unlike
philosophy, for example, which presents ideas. Humans are naturally drawn to
imitation, and so poetry has a strong pull on us. It can also be an excellent learning
device, since we can coolly observe imitations of things like dead bodies and
disgusting animals when the real thing would disturb us.
Aristotle identifies tragedy as the most refined version of poetry dealing with lofty
matters and comedy as the most refined version of poetry dealing with base
matters. He traces a brief and speculative history of tragedy as it evolved from
dithyrambic hymns in praise of the god Dionysus. Dithyrambs were sung by a large
choir, sometimes featuring a narrator. Aeschylus invented tragedy by bringing a
second actor into dialogue with the narrator. Sophocles innovated further by
introducing a third actor, and gradually tragedy shifted to its contemporary
dramatic form.
Aristotle discusses thought and diction and then moves on to address epic poetry.
Whereas tragedy consists of actions presented in a dramatic form, epic poetry
consists of verse presented in a narrative form. Tragedy and epic poetry have many
common qualities, most notably the unity of plot and similar subject matter.
However, epic poetry can be longer than tragedy, and because it is not performed,
it can deal with more fantastic action with a much wider scope. By contrast, tragedy
can be more focused and takes advantage of the devices of music and spectacle.
Epic poetry and tragedy are also written in different meters. After defending poetry
against charges that it deals with improbable or impossible events, Aristotle
concludes by weighing tragedy against epic poetry and determining that tragedy is
on the whole superior.
Analysis
Aristotles concept of mimesis helps him to explain what is distinctive about our
experience of art. Poetry is mimetic, meaning that it invites us to imagine its subject
matter as real while acknowledging that it is in fact fictional. When Aristotle
contrasts poetry with philosophy, his point is not so much that poetry is mimetic
because it portrays what is real while philosophy is nonmimetic because it portrays
only ideas. Rather, the point is that the ideas discussed in philosophical texts are as
real as any ideas ever are. When we see an actor playing Oedipus, this actor is
clearly a substitute through which we can imagine what a real Oedipus might be
like. When we read Aristotles ideas on art, we are in direct contact with the ideas,
and there is nothing more real to imagine. Art presents reality at one level of
remove, allowing us a certain detachment. We do not call the police when we see
Hamlet kill Polonius because we know that we are not seeing a real event but only
two actors imitating real-world possibilities. Because we are conscious of the
mimesis involved in art, we are detached enough that we can reflect on what we are
experiencing and so learn from it. Witnessing a murder in real life is emotionally
scarring. Witnessing a murder on stage gives us a chance to reflect on the nature
and causes of human violence so that we can lead a more reflective and sensitive
life.
Aristotle insists on the primacy of plot because the plot is ultimately what we can
learn from in a piece of art. The word we translate as plot is the Greek word
muthos, which is the root for myth. Muthos is a more general term than plot, as it
can apply to any art form, including music or sculpture. The muthos of a piece of art
is its general structure and organization, the form according to which the themes
and ideas in the piece of art make themselves apparent. The plot of a story, as the
term is used in the Poetics, is not the sequence of events so much as the logical
relationships that exist between events. For Aristotle, the tighter the logical
relationships between events, the better the plot. Oedipus Rex is a powerful tragedy
precisely because we can see the logical inevitability with which the events in the
story fall together. The logical relationships between events in a story help us to
perceive logical relationships between the events in our own lives. In essence,
tragedy shows us patterns in human experience that we can then use to make
sense of our own experience.