31:
158:
384:
100:"pertaining to poetry"; also "creative" and "productive". It stems, not surprisingly, from the word for poetry, "poiesis" (ποίησις) meaning "the activity in which a person brings something into being that did not exist before." ποίησις itself derives from the
231:. Aristotle also critically revised Plato's interpretation of mimesis which Aristotle believed represented a natural human instinct for imitation, an instinct which could be found at the core of all poetry.
104:
word "poiwéō" (ποιέω) which translates, simply, as "to make." In the
Western world, the development and evolution of poetics featured three artistic movements concerned with poetical composition: (i) the
51:, specifically the study or theory of device, structure, form, type, and effect with regards to poetry, though usage of the term can also refer to literature broadly. Poetics is distinguished from
549:
My program then was named "Theory of
Literary Forms" — a title that I supposed to be less ambiguous for minds a little distant from this specialty, if it is one, than its (for me) synonym Poetics.
364:. Twentieth-century poetics returned to the Aristotelian paradigm, followed by trends toward meta-criticality, and the establishment of a contemporary theory of poetics. Eastern poetics developed
172:
is one of the first extant philosophical treatise to attempt a rigorous taxonomy of literature. The work was lost to the
Western world for a long time. It was available in the
146:
to be anything other than deceptive and, therefore, dangerous. Only capable of producing these ineffectual copies of copies, poets had no place in his utopic city.
59:
combines poetics and hermeneutics in a single analysis; however, one or the other may predominate given the text and the aims of the one doing the reading.
288:. There followed an ever-expanding corpus of texts on poetics in the later fifteenth century and throughout the sixteenth, a phenomenon that began in
30:
726:
134:
by Plato represents the first major
Western work to treat the theory of poetry. In Book III Plato defines poetry as a type of
768:
674:
488:
743:
Benassi, A., "Lo scherzevole inganno. Figure ingegnose e argutezza nel
Cannocchiale aristotelico di Emanuele Tesauro",
968:
947:
924:
903:
872:
849:
831:
Hashmi, Alamgir (2011). "Eponymous Écriture and the
Poetics of Reading a Transnational Epic". Dublin Quarterly, 15.
1035:
758:
320:(1529, expanded edition 1563). By the early decades of the sixteenth century, vernacular versions of Aristotle's
1007:
646:
522:
55:
by its focus on the synthesis of non-semantic elements in a text rather than its semantic interpretation. Most
1040:
623:
260:
84:
represent the earliest
Western treatments of poetic theory, followed later by the work of the lyricist
204:
and it initiated a misinterpretation of
Aristotelian thought that continued through the Middle Ages.
200:
in 1278 was virtually ignored. The Arabic translation departed widely in vocabulary from the original
276:'s 1498 Latin translation of Aristotle's text (the first to be published) was included with the 1508
162:
19:
This article is about the theory of literary forms and discourse. For the treatise by
Aristotle, see
979:
789:
142:), or any mix of the two. In Book X, Plato argues that poetry is too many degrees removed from the
110:
24:
106:
888:
Original texts from 8 English poets before the 20th
Century and from 8 20th Century Americans.
541:
313:
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8:
1045:
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235:
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20:
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483:
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403:
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463:
428:
418:
337:
130:
618:
1030:
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255:
243:
143:
114:
639:
Practice and the human sciences: the case for a judgment-based practice of care
566:
438:
157:
73:
34:
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389:
357:
273:
189:
93:
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52:
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itemized the salient genres of ancient Greek drama into three categories (
493:
353:
228:
173:
101:
220:
281:
135:
72:
Generally speaking, poetics in the western tradition emerged out of
448:
443:
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247:
181:
517:. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press. 1993. p. 930.
473:
453:
369:
297:
216:
139:
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600:
598:
596:
383:
336:(1601–58) brought a different kind of sophistication to poetic.
301:
238:. The need to interpret ancient literary texts in the light of
212:
177:
138:
which takes one of three forms: the "simple," the "imitative" (
85:
81:
48:
593:
293:
289:
193:
176:
and early Renaissance only through a Latin translation of an
77:
304:. Among the most important Renaissance works on poetics are
641:. Albany: State University of New York Press. p. 115.
264:(1360), the literate elite gained a rich understanding of
254:, contributed to the development of complex discourses on
223:) while drawing a larger-scale distinction between drama,
763:. Macmillan International Higher Education. p. 952.
709:"The Internet Classics Archive | The Republic by Plato"
691:"The Internet Classics Archive | The Republic by Plato"
1000:
The New Princeton encyclopedia of poetry and poetics
515:
The New Princeton encyclopedia of poetry and poetics
379:
998:(1993). Preminger, Alex; Brogan, T. V. F. (eds.).
935:
860:
837:
819:
1017:
994:
606:
1002:. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press.
258:. Thanks first of all to Giovanni Boccaccio's
760:Princeton Encyclopaedia of Poetry and Poetics
750:
280:printing of the Greek original as part of an
161:Arabic translation of Aristotle's Poetics by
636:
242:, to appraise and assess the narratives of
963:. Hillsdale: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
667:The New Princeton Handbook of Poetic Terms
586:Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction
756:
669:. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
867:. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
835:
660:
658:
156:
29:
942:. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
500:
1018:
977:
933:
912:
891:
881:
858:
830:
826:. New York: Columbia University Press.
817:
813:. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
797:
664:
580:
344:(The Aristotelian Spyglass, 1654), on
328:'s Italian editions of 1570 and 1576.
149:
16:Theory of literary forms and discourse
956:
898:. New York: Harcourt Brace & Co.
802:. Cambridge, MA: The Riverside Press.
719:
655:
62:
806:
727:"Aristotle, Poetics, section 1447a"
489:Poetics and Linguistics Association
368:, rather than the representational
120:
13:
781:
67:
14:
1062:
637:Polkinghorne, Donald E. (2004).
382:
737:
701:
989:
683:
630:
612:
574:
554:
543:Essays In Aesthetics, Volume 4
531:
507:
360:and emphasized the perceiving
37:'s translation of Aristotle's
1:
840:Metre, Rhythm, and Verse Form
919:. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
342:Il Cannocchiale Aristotelico
234:Modern poetics developed in
7:
624:Online Etymology Dictionary
375:
261:Genealogia Deorum Gentilium
10:
1067:
886:. New York: Collier Books.
822:Classic Writings on Poetry
47:is the study or theory of
18:
836:Hobsbaum, Philip (1996).
567:Dictionary.com Unabridged
340:wrote extensively in his
324:appeared, culminating in
163:Abu Bishr Matta ibn Yunus
882:Norman, Charles (1962).
863:A Poet's Guide to Poetry
818:Harmon, William (2003).
807:Drew, Elizabeth (1933).
757:Preminger, Alex (2016).
356:, poetics tended toward
25:Poetics (disambiguation)
984:. Brazil: Indrisos.com.
978:Iturat, Isidro (2010).
934:Pinsky, Robert (1999).
844:. New York: Routledge.
787:Olson, Charles (1950).
1036:Concepts in aesthetics
957:Quinn, Arthur (1993).
551:
372:of the Western world.
188:in 1256. The accurate
180:commentary written by
165:
41:
23:. For other uses, see
913:Oliver, Mary (1998).
892:Oliver, Mary (1994).
859:Kinzie, Mary (1999).
800:How Does a Poem Mean?
798:Ciardi, John (1959).
731:www.perseus.tufts.edu
547:
314:Gian Giorgio Trissino
160:
33:
938:The Sounds of Poetry
607:T. V. F. Brogan 1993
501:Notes and references
326:Lodovico Castelvetro
196:translation made by
916:Rules for the Dance
665:Brogan, T. (1994).
409:Descriptive poetics
306:Marco Girolamo Vida
198:William of Moerbeke
186:Hermannus Alemannus
21:Poetics (Aristotle)
1041:Discourse analysis
810:Discovering Poetry
414:Historical poetics
350:figure metaforiche
184:and translated by
166:
63:History of Poetics
57:literary criticism
42:
960:Figures of Speech
895:A Poetry Handbook
770:978-1-349-15617-7
745:Studi secenteschi
676:978-0-691-03672-4
484:History of poetry
434:Rhetorical device
404:Cognitive poetics
399:Outline of poetry
236:Renaissance Italy
92:derives from the
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794:Poetry New York.
790:Projective Verse
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582:Culler, Jonathan
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464:Symbolist poetry
429:Stylistic device
419:Figure of speech
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346:figure ingeniose
338:Emanuele Tesauro
334:Baltasar Gracián
332:(1561–1627) and
113:, and (iii) the
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884:Poets on Poetry
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792:. New York, NY:
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782:Further reading
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479:Literary theory
424:Poetry analysis
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330:Luis de Góngora
310:De arte poetica
286:Rhetores graeci
268:and figurative
256:literary theory
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76:. Fragments of
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68:Western Poetics
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390:Poetry portal
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352:. During the
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459:Musical form
366:lyric poetry
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266:metaphorical
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240:Christianity
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225:lyric poetry
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168:Aristotle's
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150:Aristotle's
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115:Aristotelian
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89:
71:
53:hermeneutics
44:
43:
38:
1051:Spoken word
990:Works Cited
494:Theopoetics
312:(1527) and
174:Middle Ages
111:objectivist
88:. The term
1046:Literature
1020:Categories
1009:0691021236
648:0791462005
524:0691021236
318:La Poetica
227:, and the
221:satyr play
219:, and the
144:ideal form
109:, (2) the
96:ποιητικός
562:"poetics"
282:anthology
252:Boccaccio
136:narrative
107:formalist
98:poietikos
619:"poetic"
584:(1997).
546:, p.14:
540:(2005),
449:Allusion
444:Allegory
376:See also
248:Petrarch
182:Averroes
131:Republic
123:Republic
121:Plato's
1026:Poetics
981:Poetics
474:Refrain
454:Imagery
362:subject
322:Poetics
298:England
217:tragedy
209:Poetics
202:Poetics
170:Poetics
152:Poetics
140:mimetic
90:poetics
45:Poetics
39:Poetics
1031:Poetry
1006:
967:
946:
923:
902:
871:
848:
767:
673:
645:
521:
302:France
300:, and
278:Aldine
270:tropes
250:, and
213:comedy
178:Arabic
86:Pindar
82:Hesiod
49:poetry
294:Spain
290:Italy
244:Dante
194:Latin
190:Greek
102:Doric
78:Homer
1004:ISBN
965:ISBN
944:ISBN
921:ISBN
900:ISBN
869:ISBN
846:ISBN
765:ISBN
671:ISBN
643:ISBN
519:ISBN
348:and
229:epic
207:The
128:The
80:and
316:'s
308:'s
284:of
1022::
729:.
711:.
693:.
657:^
621:.
595:^
564:.
296:,
272:.
246:,
215:,
117:.
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973:.
952:.
929:.
908:.
877:.
854:.
773:.
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715:.
697:.
679:.
651:.
627:.
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192:-
27:.
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