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THOMAS PUTTFARKEN
Titian and Tragic Painting: Aristotle's Poetics and the Rise of the Modern Artist
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005. 256 pp...
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Rodríguez-the same Rodríguez who signs his name to the most impenetrable essays ever found in scholarly journals on art history and theory; author of the book Champions of the Ideologeme, member of the International Association of Critics and circumstances permitting, photographer of male nudes, to boot; Rodríguez, in sum, a dwarfish polyglot and fruitcake who, when he has a headache, just picks up any volume by Lyotard or Francastel-let out a semiotically pure guffaw and shook like an asthmatic. You're more likely to find a copy of Aristotle's Poetics in the snack bar at the Council of State. Let's see now, on Tuesday and Wednesday I'll be at that event, on Thursday I have office hours, and on Friday, I'm scheduled to meet with the curator from the Birmingham Photo Gallery.
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... as Plato's Republic (22) and Laws, (23) Aristotle's Politics, (24) and Saint Augustine's City of God.... (24.) ARISTOTLE, POLITICS AND POETICS (Benjamin Jowett trans.), available at http:// www...
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Near the end of the text, Stein explains, in a moment of rare clarity, that the purpose of art "is to live in the actual present . . . and to completely express that complete actual present" You don't need to teU Greenspan that No matter how outré his character or undramatic his materials, he's always shockingly, divinely present, whether he's reciting Aristotle's Poetics (The Argument), simultaneously portraying 14 Republican senators (The Myopia), enacting a demon matriarch (Coraline), or sidelining, thrillingly, as a houseboy in a Broadway show (The Royal Family).
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ISBN: 0300110006
TITLE: Titian & tragic painting; Aristotle's poetics and the rise of the modern artist.
AUTHOR: Puttfarken, Thomas.
PUBLISHER: Ya...
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Numerous passages, on the other hand, speak to the author's passion for the genre. [...] in the margin of a set of Favourite Songs compiled from Veracini's Adriano in Siria (London, 1736), Feldman notes that for the price of Walsh's print, you could be an Adriano, an Emirena, a Farnaspe, or even an Osroa, which effectively meant you could play Senesino, Cuzzoni, Bartolli, or Montagnana playing one of their parts, or even pretend to be Farinelli.
..." ignores a basic tenet of Aristotelian poetics, as inherited by opera seria from French classicis..." and "actions of noble personages" (Aristotle, Poetics, line 1448b26), regardless of their polit...
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...(24) . At least ever since Aristotle's classic division of poetry into its species--epi...2 (2001): 223-242. . (25.) Aristotle, Poetics, trans. with an introduction and notes by Malcom H...
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For this reason they are on a level between abstraction and common sense experience and are present in poems as implicit 'embodied' properties . . . not explicit, let alone propositional, elements.'' James Redfield writes that the plot is the story conceived ... in terms of relations between . . . causes and consequences; for this reason it shows us the internal logic of the events represented and conveys some universal pattern of human probability or necessity. The philosopher starts with what is first for us and arrives at what is first in itself, that is to say, he moves from the domain of the sensible to that of the intelligible,147 and uncovers archai that are universal in the strict sense of the term.118 Given that he attains conceptual articulations of the essential nature of th...
...IN CHAPTER 9 OF THE POETICS, Aristotle famously writes that poetry "is more ph...
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...' work is compatible with Plato's and Aristotle's but that "the quest for the 'common sense' under.... (10.) Aristotle, Poetics 1451a36-b11. . (11.) Strauss, City and Man, 155. ....
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Jarman reviews Theory's Empire: An Anthology of Dissent by Denis Donoghue and edited by Daphne Patai and Will H. Corral.
... by reviewing the meaning attached to poetics by Plato and Aristotle, and the relation of poetic...