Aristotle devotes great attention to the nature,
structure and basic elements of the ideal tragic plot. Tragedy is the depiction
of action consisting of incidents and events. Plot is the arrangement of these
incident and events. It contains the kernel of the action. Aristotle says that
plot is the first principle, the soul of tragedy. He lists six formative
elements of a tragedy – Plot, character, thought, melody, diction, spectacle
and gives the first place to plot.
The Greek word for ‘poet’ means a ‘maker’, and the
poet is a ‘maker’, not because he makes verses but he makes plots. Aristotle
differentiates between ‘story’ and ‘plot’. The poet need not make his story.
Stories from history, mythology, or legend are to be preferred, for they are
familiar and understandable. Having chosen or invented the story, it must be
put to artistic selection and order. The incidents chosen must be ‘serious’,
and not ‘trivial’, as tragedy is an imitation of a serious action that arouse
pity and fear.
Aristotle says that the tragic plot must be a
complete whole. It must have a beginning, a middle and an end. It must have a
beginning, i.e. it must not flow out of some prior situation. The beginning
must be clear and intelligible. It must not provoke to ask ‘why’ and ‘how’. A
middle is consequent upon a situation gone before. The middle is followed
logically by the end. And end is consequent upon a given situation, but is not
followed by any further incident. Thus artistic wholeness implies logical
link-up of the various incidents, events and situations that form the plot.
The plot must have a certain magnitude or ‘length’.
‘Magnitude’ here means ‘size’. It should be neither too small nor too large. It
should be long enough to allow the process of change from happiness to misery
but not too long to be forgotten before the end. If it is too small, its
different parts will not be clearly distinguishable from each other. Magnitude
also implies order and proportion and they depend upon the magnitude. The
different parts must be properly related to each other and to the whole. Thus
magnitude implies that the plot must have order, logic symmetry and
perspicuity.
Aristotle considers the tragic plot to be an
organic whole, and also having organic unity in its action. An action is a change
from happiness to misery or vice versa and tragedy must depict one such action.
The incidents impart variety and unity results by arranging the incidents so
that they all tend to the same catastrophe. There might be episodes for they
impart variety and lengthen the plot but they must be properly combined with
the main action following each other inevitably. It must not be possible to
remove or to invert them without injuring the plot. Otherwise, episodic plots
are the worst of all.
'Organic unity' cannot be provided only by the
presence of the tragic hero, for many incidents in hero’s life cannot be
brought into relation with the rest. So there should be proper shifting and
ordering of material.
Aristotle joins organic unity of plot with
probability and necessity. The plot is not tied to what has actually happened
but it deals with what may probably or necessarily happen. Probability and
necessity imply that there should be no unrelated events and incidents. Words
and actions must be in character. Thus probability and necessity imply unity
and order and are vital for artistic unity and wholeness.
'Probability' implies that the tragic action must
be convincing. If the poet deals with something improbable, he must make it
convincing and credible. He dramatist must procure, “willing suspension of
disbelief”. Thus a convincing impossibility is to be preferred to an
unconvincing possibility.
Aristotle rules out plurality of action. He
emphasizes the Unity of Action but has little to say about the Unity of Time
and the Unity of Place. About the Unity of Time he merely says that tragedy
should confine itself to a single revolution of the sun. As regards the Unity
of Place, Aristotle said that epic can narrate a number of actions going on all
together in different parts, while in a drama simultaneous actions cannot be
represented, for the stage is one part and not several parts or places.
Tragedy is an imitation of a ‘serious action’ which
arouses pity and fear. ‘Serious’ means important, weighty. The plot of a
tragedy essentially deals with great moral issues. Tragedy is a tale of
suffering with an unhappy ending. This means that the plot of a tragedy must be
a fatal one. Aristotle rules out fortunate plots for tragedy, for such plot
does not arouse tragic emotions. A tragic plot must show the hero passing from
happiness to misery and not from misery to happiness. The suffering of the hero
may be caused by an enemy or a stranger but it would be most piteous when it is
by chance caused by friends and relatives who are his well-wishers.
According to Aristotle, Tragic plots may be of
three kinds, (a) Simple, (b) Complex and (c) Plots based on or depicting
incidents of suffering. A Simple plot is without any Peripety and Anagnorisis
but the action moves forward uniformly without any violent or sudden change.
Aristotle prefers Complex plots. It must have Peripeteia, i.e. “reversal of
intention” and Anagnorisis, i.e. “recognition of truth”. While Peripeteia is
ignorance of truth, Anagnorisis is the insight of truth forced upon the hero by
some signs or chance or by the logic events. In ideal plot Anagnorisis follows
or coincides with Peripeteia.
'Recognition' in the sense is closely akin to
reversal. Recognition and reversal can be caused by separate incidents. Often
it is difficult to separate the two. Complex plots are the best, for
recognition and reversal add the element of surprise and “the pitiable and
fearful incidents are made more so by the shock of surprise”.
As regards the third kind of plot, Aristotle rates
it very low. It derives its effect from the depiction of torture, murder,
maiming, death etc. and tragic effect must be created naturally and not with
artificial and theatrical aids. Such plots indicate a deficiency in the art of
the poet.
In making plots, the poets should make their
denouements, effective and successful. Unraveling of the plot should be done
naturally and logically, and not by arbitrary devices, like chance or
supernatural devices. Aristotle does not consider Poetic Justice necessary for
Tragedy. He rules out plots with a double end i.e. plots in which there is
happiness for one, and misery for others. Such plots weaken the tragic effect.
It is more proper to Comedy. Thus Aristotle is against Tragi-comedy.
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