Aristotle
Aristotle
The first kind of distinction is the means the poets employ. Just as a
painter employs paint and a sculptor employs stone, the poet employs
language, rhythm, and harmony, either singly or in combinations. Music
combines both rhythm and harmony, while dance uses only the rhythmical
movement of the dancers to convey its message
In tragedy, comedy, and some kinds of poetry, rhythm, language, and
harmony are all used. In some cases, as in dithyrambic poetry, all three are
used together, while in other cases, as in comedy or tragedy, the different
parts come in to play at different times.
The second distinction is the objects that are imitated. All poetry
represents actions with agents who are either better than us, worse than us,
or quite like us.
For instance, tragedy and epic poetry deal with characters who are better
than us, while comedy and parody deal with characters who are worse than
us.
Catharsis in literature works a lot like therapy does in real life: by giving
readers the opportunity to experience intense emotions from a distance, it
allows them to let it all out.
In Poetics, Aristotle argues that the true aim of tragedy is to bring about a
purification of emotion.