Peripeteia, Harmartia
Peripeteia, Harmartia
Peripeteia, Harmartia
Peripeteia
/ˌpɛrɪpɪˈtʌɪə,ˌpɛrɪpɪˈtiːə/
noun
FORMAL
1. a sudden reversal of fortune or change in circumstances, especially in
reference to fictional narrative.
"the peripeteias of the drama"
Peripeteia is the sudden change in a situation. This is a term used to describe plot
twists in literary works, like the Greek play Oedipus Rexby Sophocles. The peripeteia
is the climax of the plot of a piece of literature. Aristotle, the Greek philosopher and
dramatic critic, was one of the first to discuss peripeteia in drama as the 'reversal of
the situation.'
in Oedipus Rex
The entire plot of Oedipus Rex revolves around a hidden truth: that king Oedipus
murdered his father and married his mother. At the beginning of the play, king
Oedipus does not know this truth. He is a good king who tries to get rid of a plague
on the city by following a prophecy to find Laius's killer.
Tieresias, the blind prophet, tells Oedipus, 'Thou art the murderer of the man whose
murderer thou pursuest.' But Oedipus refuses to believe Tieresias at first. This leads
him down a path to find the truth. The final piece of this puzzle is in discovering who
Oedipus's parents are. Oedipus finds out that his parents were not actually his
parents. The last thing he has to know his who his real parents are because if it is
Laius and Jocasta, then he has actually killed his father and married his mother.
Building up to the peripeteia, Oedipus has a conversation with the herdsmen who
found him abandoned on the mountainside. Reluctantly, the herdsmen tells Oedipus
that the abandoned child, 'was one of the children of Laius.' Now, Oedipus realizes
the truth. It is his moment of peripeteia
Aristotle's view[edit]
Aristotle, in his Poetics, defines peripeteia as "a change by which the action
veers round to its opposite, subject always to our rule of probability or
necessity." According to Aristotle, peripeteia, along with discovery, is the
most effective when it comes to drama, particularly in a tragedy. He wrote
that "The finest form of Discovery is one attended by Peripeteia, like that
which goes with the Discovery in Oedipus...".[1]
Aristotle says that peripeteia is the most powerful part of a plot in a tragedy
along with discovery. A peripety is the change of the kind described from one
state of things within the play to its opposite, and that too in the way we are
saying, in the probable or necessary sequence of events. There is often no
element like Peripeteia; it can bring forth or result in terror, mercy, or in
comedies it can bring a smile or it can bring forth tears (Rizo).
This is the best way to spark and maintain attention throughout the various
form and genres of drama "Tragedy imitates good actions and, thereby,
measures and depicts the well-being of its protagonist. But in his formal
definition, as well as throughout the Poetics, Aristotle emphasizes that" ...
Tragedy is an imitation not only of a complete action, but also of events
inspiring fear or pity" (1452a 1); in fact, at one point Aristotle isolates the
imitation of "actions that excite pity and fear" as "the distinctive mark of
tragic imitation" (1452b 30).
Pity and fear are effected through reversal and recognition; and these "most
powerful elements of emotional interest in Tragedy-Peripeteia or Reversal of
the Situation, and recognition scenes-are parts of the plot (1450a 32). has the
shift of the tragic protagonist's fortune from good to bad, which is essential to
the plot of a tragedy. It is often an ironic twist. Good uses of Peripeteia are
those that especially are parts of a complex plot, so that they are defined by
their changes of fortune being accompanied by reversal, recognition, or both"
(Smithson).
Peripeteia includes changes of character, but also more external changes. A
character who becomes rich and famous from poverty and obscurity has
undergone peripeteia, even if his character remains the same.
When a character learns something he had been previously ignorant of, this is
normally distinguished from peripeteia as anagnorisis or discovery, a
distinction derived from Aristotle's work.
Aristotle considered anagnorisis, leading to peripeteia, the mark of a superior
tragedy. Two such plays are Oedipus Rex, where the oracle's information
that Oedipus had killed his father and married his mother brought about his
mother's death and his own blindness and exile, and Iphigenia in Tauris,
where Iphigenia realizes that the strangers she is to sacrifice are her brother
and his friend, resulting in all three of them escaping Tauris. These plots he
considered complex and superior to simple plots without anagnorisis or
peripeteia, such as when Medea resolves to kill her children, knowing they
are her children, and does so. Aristotle identified Oedipus Rex as the
principal work demonstrating peripety. (See Aristotle's Poetics.)
hamartia
/həˈmɑːtɪə/
noun
1. a fatal flaw leading to the downfall of a tragic hero or heroine.
"there's supposed to be an action that reveals the protagonist's hamartia"