Revista Interdisciplinar de Direito (Jun 2014)

Poesia-tragédia, mimesis e filosofia: duas leituras da poética de Aristóteles

  • Theresa Calvet de Magalhães

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Fernando Belo’s rereading of Aristotle’s Poetics, a philosophical semiotic exercise, aims to illustrate the epistemology of language already developed in a previous work, in 1991. Against Plato’s expulsion of the poets from his ideal Republic, Aristotle subordinates poetry to philosophy, and mimesis to the defi nition of ousia, thereby recognizing a place for the poets. Th e fi nal aim of Aristotle’s Poetics was then to create the condiions for an alliance of tragedy and philosophy. In Time and Narrative, Ricoeur “temporalizes” the tragic mythos, but he also redefi nes the concept of mythos or narrative emplotment in Aristotle’s Poetics making it coextensive to the whole narrative fi eld. Paul Ricoeur’s reading of the Poetics “narrativises” the Aristotelian model.

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