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catharsis |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
catharsisPurging or purification of emotions through art. The term is derived from the Greek katharsis (“purgation,” “cleansing”), a medical term used by Aristotle as a metaphor to describe the effects of dramatic tragedy on the spectator: by arousing vicarious pity and terror, tragedy directs the spectator's own anxieties outward and, through sympathetic identification with the tragic protagonist, purges them. catharsis 1. (in Aristotelian literary criticism) the purging or purification of the emotions through the evocation of pity and fear, as in tragedy 2. Psychoanal the bringing of repressed ideas or experiences into consciousness, thus relieving tensions 3. purgation, esp of the bowels catharsis [kə′thär·səs] (psychology) Release of tension by releasing deep-seated emotions or reliving a traumatic experience. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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KATHARSIS WORLDWITHOVTEND (Ajna Offensive)--WORLD erupts with more brutal chaos than previous releases. But it was his most recent work, Katharsis, that brought down the house. 53 Bernard Weinberg has shown that katharsis was widely understood as a compromise concept, a way to deflect Plato's criticism by bringing the pleasure of "mimetic" poetry back to moral utility. |
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