Mimetic theory Flashcards
Plato & Aristotle
Who was Plato and what did he write?
Plato was the first literary critic and the first critic of literature. Wrote Republic
What was Plato’s stance on poetry/guardians?
- Plato suggests that the guardians should not read poetry and the poets have no place in the ideal republic.
Mimesis
imitation, or imitative representation of the real world in art and literature. For Plato, imitation is of the ideal or unchanging Forms, thus poetry is devalued as an inferior copy of reality. For Aristotle, the term suggests “making” or representing human life in its joys and sorrows.
Role of Mimesis in Society
- Plato’s “The Republic” addresses the societal role of mimesis, expressing concerns about its potential negative impact.
- He limits permissible types of poetry in the ideal republic, allowing only hymns to gods and praises of state heroes.
The permissible types of poetry in Plato’s republic
are:
- hymns to the gods
- praises of state heroes
All other forms of poetry must be censored.
what was Plato’s challenge to literary theory
Plato says he will allow the poets back into the
republic if they can prove by means of some
formal defense that poetry:
1. has a useful function in a well-ordered state;
2. that it does not deceive but rather enhances our
knowledge of truth.
What did Aristotle do?
Aristotle
1) made poetry worthy of philosophical
consideration;
2) reconnected metaphysical issues to empirical
reality.
He showed how knowledge can be broken up into
disciplines.
What did Aristotle write?
Poetics 330BC
Aristotle treats poetry
as a separate discipline
with its specific laws,
its own unique tools
and its own proper ends.
What Poetics do to the notion of mimesis?
Poetics reinterprets the notion of mimesis.
Aristotelian concept of mimesis
Mimesis is a positive and natural thing.
1) As children, we learn primarily from imitation.
2) As adults, we delight in recognising and
contemplating imitations.
3) We possess an instinctive desire for harmony that
imitation produces.
How Poetics define mimesis?
Poetics defines mimesis as a craft with its own
internal laws and aims rather than a mirror of
something else. Aristotle treats poetry as a natural object, an organic
entity.The artist is not an imitator, but a maker, a
craftsman.
Praxis
Action or story (praxis) is long, episodic,
haphazard.
Plato vs Aristotelian mimesis
In contrast to Plato, for Aristotle, mimesis works
in accordance with the laws of reason.
Episodic plot
The episodic plot shows no internal cohesion
between the scenes. In the episodic plot events are based on the post hoc
principle.
Aristotelian plot
The Aristotelian plot relies on a causal relationship
between each scene that propels the reader toward
the outcome. In the Aristotelian plot events are based on the
propter hoc principle.