Imitation and Catharsis
Imitation and Catharsis
Imitation and Catharsis
Dr. Suman*
Assistant Professor
Department of English
Govt. College, Chhachharauli
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Notions Vol. 7 No. 2, 2016 ISSN (P): 0976-5247, (e): 2395-7239
not merely the outward events, which in any case, are the result of inward motives. Aristotle
when observing poetry in connection with men in action excludes from the sphere of poetry,
the 'physical' world containing landscapes and animals. The poet does not produce a literal
copy of the world as he sees it, the inner world of man is very much the object of imitation in
poetry. Abercrombie rightly remarks about Aristotle “within the scope Aristotle has assigned
to his subject, all poems may be classified as either narrative or dramatic”. (77) Poetry is not
a mere photographic representation, is not a mere copy of the world, but the poet tries to
create a work of art which has a permanent relevance. Aristotle asserts in the Poetics that:
By a Universal (or General) statement I mean one as to what such or such a kind of
man will probably or necessarily say or do – which is the aim of poetry, though it
affixes proper names to the characters. (50 & 52)
It implies “how a certain type or nature will on occasion speak or act, according to the law of
probability or necessity. Poetry has no place for irrelevant. The material has to be pruned.
The chaos of life has to be brought under a design, a pattern or an order. This is imperative
for the poetry to gain truth and universality.
Critics have found Aristotle somewhat inconsistent in his case of world imitation:
Aristotle comments that poet should not speak in his own person, “for this does not make him
an imitator", yet he allows the poet the scope of imitating through narration. J.W. Atkin
remarks: “Into the term 'imitation', he read a new and definite meaning which made the poetic
process out to be not mere copying but an act of creative vision.” (99) He further remarks.
“Imitation to Aristotle was none other than „'re-creation‟.” (99)
Aristotle himself says in the Poetics: “Poetry tends to express the universal, history the
particular.” (100)
The term „Catharsis‟ is used once in the course of Aristotle's Poetics in the fourth
chapter. The terms catharsis occurs in Aristotle‟s definition of tragedy: “Tragedy is an
imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in the form of
action, not of narrative; through pity and fear affecting the proper catharsis, or purgation of
these emotions.” Aristotle himself has not defined this term. The term has been explained by
other critics in light of Aristotle‟s other works, such as the Politics and the Ethics. „Catharsis‟
has three meanings; it could mean “purgation” or purification" or “clarification.” Pity as told
by Aristotle is occasional by undeserved misfortune and fear by that of one like ourselves.
Both are related emotions. Aristotle everywhere says that pity and fear are the characteristics
and necessary tragic emotions. The term catharsis has been interpreted in medical terms
meaning purgative. In medical terms purgation meant the partial removal of excess
“humours”. Catharsis in this sense denotes a pathological effect on the soul comparable to the
effect of medicine on the body. Some critics favour this medical sense in the light of
“homeopathic” treatment in which it is „like curing like‟. Aristotle says in the Politics, that
emotions should not be expressed but they must be removed. In the Poetics Aristotle refers to
the curing of religious frenzy.
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Notions Vol. 7 No. 2, 2016 ISSN (P): 0976-5247, (e): 2395-7239
Milton in his Preface to Samson Agonistes expresses a similar view that the effect of
tragedy is to temper and reduce. In the neo-classical period, the medical interpretation of term
took on an “allopathic” light. Catharsis was seen to be in nature of the unlike curing the
unlike. Dryden in his Preface to Troilus and Cressida, says that it is not “the abasement of
pity and fear, but of such aggressive and evil emotions as pride and anger through the feeding
and watering of the soft hearted emotions.”(138) Some critics have tried to give a
psychological explanation to the term „Catharsis‟. Herbert Read considers it in the light of a
safety valve. I. A. Richards puts forward an ingenious theory. He says that the emotion of
pity is an impulse to advance, while fear is an impulse to withdraw. In tragedy both these
impulses are blended.
Humphrey House says that Aristotle‟s concept of catharsis was not in medical term,
but he says that it is a kind of “moral conditioning” which the spectator undergoes. He
comments that catharsis means „cleansing.‟ It is a purification of the excess and defect in our
emotions, so that emotional equilibrium can be restored. Butcher too agrees with purification
theory.
Some critics believe that the implications of catharsis are to found in the Poetics
itself. Aristotle writes that the pleasure in imitative arts is concerned with learning. Pleasure
does not come from joy alone. Again he tells that tragedy has its own kind of pleasure and
that we must seek from it this pleasure –“the pleasure proper to it” and catharsis involves
such a pleasure. The function of tragedy is to provide the pleasure peculiar to it. This pleasure
involves the presentation of events which arouse pity and fear. According to this theory,
catharsis becomes an indication of the function of tragedy, and not of its emotional effects on
the audience.
The purgation theory and the purification theory of catharsis have obvious limitations.
The main drawback of these theories is that these are concerned with the effect of tragedy on
the audience i.e. with the psychology of the audience. But in all Aristotle is a great critic and
what he said centuries ago will continue to influence thinking as it has done all this time. It is
unfortunate that he has not explained some of the terms which seem very significant. The
term „catharsis‟ is interpreted so variously, that it is difficult to come to an agreement as to
what really meant. Catharsis is the part of complex plot not of simple plot and it comes from
„missing the mark.‟
Works Cited
1. Sen, S. ed. Aristotle’s Poetic. New Delhi: Unique Publishers, 2016.
2. https://www.google.co.in/search?=text+aristotle%27s+poetics