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Classical unities

The classical unities, Aristotelian unities, or three unities represent a prescriptive theory of dramatic tragedy that was introduced in Italy in the 16th century and was influential for three centuries. The three unities are:

  1. unity of action: a tragedy should have one principal action.
  2. unity of time: the action in a tragedy should occur over a period of no more than 24 hours.
  3. unity of place: a tragedy should exist in a single physical location.

History edit

Italy edit

In 1514, author and critic Gian Giorgio Trissino (1478 – 1550) introduced the concept of the unities in his blank-verse tragedy, Sofonisba. Trissino claimed he was following Aristotle. However, Trissino had no access to Aristotle's most significant work on the tragic form, Poetics. Trissino expanded with his own ideas on what he was able to glean from Aristotle's book, Rhetoric. In Rhetoric Aristotle considers the dramatic elements of action and time, while focusing on audience reception. Poor translations at the time resulted in some misreadings by Trissino.[1][2]

Trissino's play Sofonisba followed classical Greek style by adhering to the unities, by omitting the usual act division, and even introducing a chorus. The many Italian playwrights that came after Trissino in the 16th Century, also wrote in accordance to the unities. However, according to The Cambridge Guide to Theatre, the imitation of classical forms and modes had a deadening effect on Italian drama, which became "rhetorical and inert". None of the 16th century tragedies that were influenced by the rediscovery of ancient literature have survived except as historic examples. One of the best is Pietro Aretino's Orazia (1546), which nevertheless is found to be stiff, distant and lacking in feeling.[3]

In 1570 the unities were codified and given new definition by Lodovico Castelvetro (ca. 1505–1571) in his influential translation and interpretation of Aristotle’s Poetics, Poetica d'Aristotele vulgarizzata e sposta ("The Poetics of Aristotle translated in the Vulgar Language and commented on"). Though Castelvetro’s translations are considered crude and inaccurate, and though he at times altered Aristotle's meanings to make his own points, his translations were influential and inspired the vast number of scholarly debates and discussions that followed all through Europe.[4][5]

France edit

One hundred and twenty years after Sofonisba introduced the theory to Italy, it then introduced the concept once again, this time in France with a translation by Jean Mairet. Voltaire said that the Sophonisba of Mairet had "a merit which was then entirely new in France, — that of being in accordance with the rules of the theatre. The three unities of action, time, and place are there strictly observed, and the author was regarded as the father of the French stage." The new rules caught on very quickly in France. Corneille became an ardent supporter of them, and in his plays from Le Cid (1636) to Suréna (1674) he attempted to keep within the limits of time and place. In 1655 he published his Trois Discours, which includes his arguments for the unities. Corneille's principles drew the support of Racine and Voltaire, and for French playwrights they became hard rules, and a heresy to disobey them. Voltaire said:

All nations begin to regard as barbarous those times when even the greatest geniuses, such as Lope de Vega and Shakespeare, were ignorant of this system, and they even confess the obligation they are under to us for having rescued them from this barbarism. . . . The fact that Corneille, Racine, Molière, Addison, Congreve, and Maffei have all observed the laws of the stage, that ought to be enough to restrain any one who should entertain the idea of violating them.[6]

However in France opposition soon began to grow in the form of a Romantic movement, that wanted freedom from the strictures of the classical unities. It turned into a fierce literary conflict. The opposition included Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, and others. Victor Hugo, in the preface to his play, Cromwell, criticizes the unities, saying in part,

Distinguished contemporaries, foreigners and Frenchmen, have already attacked, both in theory and in practice, that fundamental law of the pseudo-Aristotelian code. Indeed, the combat was not likely to be a long one. At the first blow it cracked, so worm-eaten was that timber of the old scholastic hovel![7][8]

Hugo ridicules the unities of place and time, but not the unity of action, which he considers "true and well founded". The conflict came to a climax with the production of Victor Hugo's play Hernani at the Theatre Francais, on the 21st of February 1830. It was reported that the two sides, the "Classicists" and "Romanticists", both full of passion, met as on a field of battle. There was a lot of clamor in the theatre at each performance, even some fist fights. The newer Romantic movement carried the day, and French playwrights no longer had to confine their plays to one location, and have all of the action packed into one day.[9]

England edit

The Classical Unities seem to have had less impact in England. It had adherents in Ben Jonson and John Dryden. Examples of plays that followed the theory include: Thomas Otway's Venice Preserv'd (1682), Joseph Addison's Cato, and Samuel Johnson's Irene (1749). Shakespeare's The Tempest (1610) takes place almost entirely on an island, during the course of four hours, and with one major action — that of Prospero reclaiming his role as the Duke of Milan. It is suggested that Prospero's way of regularly checking the time of day during the play might be satirizing the concept of the unities. In An Apology for Poetry (1595), Philip Sidney advocates for the unities, and complains that English plays are ignoring them. In Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale the chorus notes that the story makes a jump of 16 years:

Impute it not a crime
To me or my swift passage, that I slide
O'er sixteen years and leave the growth untried
Of that wide gap[10]

John Dryden discusses the unity of time in this passage criticizing Shakespeare's history plays:

... they are rather so many Chronicles of Kings, or the business many times of thirty or forty years, crampt into a representation of two hours and a half, which is not to imitate or paint Nature, but rather to draw her in miniature, to take her in little; to look upon her through the wrong end of a Perspective, and receive her Images not onely much less, but infinitely more imperfect then the life: this instead of making a Play delightful, renders it ridiculous.[11]

Samuel Johnson in the preface to his edition of Shakespeare in 1773 rejects the previous dogma of the classical unities and argues that drama should be faithful to life:

The unities of time and place are not essential to a just drama, and that though they may sometimes conduce to pleasure, they are always to be sacrificed to the nobler beauties of variety and instruction; and that a play written with nice observation of the critical rules is to be contemplated as an elaborate curiosity, as the product of superfluous and ostentatious art, by which is shown rather what is possible than what is necessary.[12]

After Johnson's critique interest seemed to turn away from the theory.[13][14]

John Pitcher, in the Arden Shakespeare Third Series edition of The Winter's Tale (2010), suggests that Shakespeare was familiar with the unities due to an English translation of Poetics that became popular around 1608.[15]

Excerpts of Aristotle's Poetics edit

Aristotle's Poetics may not have been available to Trissino when he formulated the unities, and the term "Aristotelian unities" is considered a misnomer, but in spite of this, Aristotle's name became attached to the theory from the beginning. As translations became available, theorists have looked to the Poetics retrospectively for support of the concept.[16] In these passages from the Poetics, Aristotle considers action:

Tragedy, then is a process of imitating an action which has serious implications, is complete, and possesses magnitude.[17] … A poetic imitation, then, ought to be unified in the same way as a single imitation in any other mimetic field, by having a single object: since the plot is an imitation of an action, the latter ought to be both unified and complete, and the component events ought to be so firmly compacted that if any one of them is shifted to another place, or removed, the whole is loosened up and dislocated; for an element whose addition or subtraction makes no perceptible extra difference is not really a part of the whole.[18]

Aristotle considers length or time in a distinction between the epic and tragedy:

Well then, epic poetry followed in the wake of tragedy up to the point of being a (1) good-sized (2) imitation (3) in verse (4) of people who are to be taken seriously; but in its having its verse unmixed with any other and being narrative in character, there they differ. Further, so far as its length is concerned tragedy tries as hard as it can to exist during a single daylight period, or to vary but little, while the epic is not limited in its time and so differs in that respect.[19]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ascoli, Albert Russell, Renaissance Drama 36/37: Italy in the Drama of Europe. Northwestern University Press, 2010. p. 46-56 ISBN 9780810124158
  2. ^ Simpson, Edwin. The Dramatic Unities. Trubner & Co. (1878)
  3. ^ Banham, Martin and Brandon, James, eds. The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge University Press, 1995. ISBN 9780521434379. p. 544
  4. ^ Clarke, Barrett H. European Theories of Drama. Crown Publishers. (1969) P. 48
  5. ^ Urban, Richard L. "All or Nothing at All: Another Look at the Unity of Time in Aristotle". The Classical Journal. Vol. 61, No. 6. (March 1966) pp. 262-264
  6. ^ Simpson, Edwin. The Dramatic Unities. Trubner & Co. (1878)
  7. ^ Beck, Theodore Toulon. "A Note on the Preface de Cromwell". Italica. Vol. 39, No. 3 (Sep., 1962), pp. 197-204
  8. ^ Hugo, Victor. Oliver Cromwell. Forgotten Books (September 11, 2017) pp. i-vi. ISBN 978-1528244343
  9. ^ Simpson, Edwin. The Dramatic Unities. Trubner & Co. (1878) p. 55-60
  10. ^ Shakespeare, William. The Winter's Tale. First Folio. Act IV, scene i, line 3-6.
  11. ^ Dryden, An Essay of Dramatick Poesie (1668), para. 56.
  12. ^ Greene, Donald (1989), Samuel Johnson: Updated Edition, Boston: Twayne Publishers, ISBN 08057-6962-5
  13. ^ Shakespeare, William. Vaughan, Virginia Mason. Vaughn, Alden T. editors. The Tempest. The Arden Shakespeare, Third Series. 1999. p. 14-18 ISBN 9781903436-08-0
  14. ^ Friedland , Louis Sigmund. The Dramatic Unities in England. The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, Vol. 10, No. 1 (Jan., 1911), pp. 56-89
  15. ^ Shakespeare, William. Pitcher, John. editor. The Winter's Tale Third Series (2010). The Arden Shakespeare. ISBN 9781903436356
  16. ^ Ascoli, Albert Russell, Renaissance Drama 36/37: Italy in the Drama of Europe. Northwestern University Press, 2010. p. 46-56 ISBN 9780810124158
  17. ^ Aristotle. Else, Gerald F. Aristotle Poetics. University of Michigan Press (1967). p. 25. ISBN 978-0472061662
  18. ^ Aristotle. Else, Gerald F. Aristotle Poetics. University of Michigan Press (1967). p. 32. ISBN 978-0472061662
  19. ^ Aristotle. Else, Gerald F. Aristotle Poetics. University of Michigan Press (1967). p. 24. ISBN 978-0472061662

References edit

  • Aristotle (1907). The Poetics of Aristotle (Project Gutenberg e-text # 1974). Samuel Henry Butcher (trans.) (4th ed.). London: Macmillan. OCLC 3113766.
  • Dryden, John (1668). Jack Lynch (ed.). . London: Henry Harringman. OCLC 4969880. Archived from the original (Online reprint) on 2005-07-31. Retrieved 2005-05-15.
  • Johnson, Samuel (2005) [1765]. Mr. Johnson's Preface To his Edition of Shakespear's Plays (Online reprint). Ian Lancashire (Ed.) (online edition published by RPO Editors, Department of English, and University of Toronto Press as Samuel Johnson (1709-1784): Preface to his Edition of Shakespeare's Plays (1765). ed.). London: J. and R. Tonson and others. OCLC 10834559.

External links edit

  • The Poetics of Aristotle, translated by Samuel Henry Butcher at Project Gutenberg
  • Samuel Johnson. Preface to Shakespeare at Project Gutenberg

classical, unities, unities, redirects, here, concept, common, four, unities, classical, unities, aristotelian, unities, three, unities, represent, prescriptive, theory, dramatic, tragedy, that, introduced, italy, 16th, century, influential, three, centuries, . unities redirects here For the concept in common law see four unities The classical unities Aristotelian unities or three unities represent a prescriptive theory of dramatic tragedy that was introduced in Italy in the 16th century and was influential for three centuries The three unities are unity of action a tragedy should have one principal action unity of time the action in a tragedy should occur over a period of no more than 24 hours unity of place a tragedy should exist in a single physical location Contents 1 History 1 1 Italy 1 2 France 1 3 England 2 Excerpts of Aristotle s Poetics 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editItaly edit In 1514 author and critic Gian Giorgio Trissino 1478 1550 introduced the concept of the unities in his blank verse tragedy Sofonisba Trissino claimed he was following Aristotle However Trissino had no access to Aristotle s most significant work on the tragic form Poetics Trissino expanded with his own ideas on what he was able to glean from Aristotle s book Rhetoric In Rhetoric Aristotle considers the dramatic elements of action and time while focusing on audience reception Poor translations at the time resulted in some misreadings by Trissino 1 2 Trissino s play Sofonisba followed classical Greek style by adhering to the unities by omitting the usual act division and even introducing a chorus The many Italian playwrights that came after Trissino in the 16th Century also wrote in accordance to the unities However according to The Cambridge Guide to Theatre the imitation of classical forms and modes had a deadening effect on Italian drama which became rhetorical and inert None of the 16th century tragedies that were influenced by the rediscovery of ancient literature have survived except as historic examples One of the best is Pietro Aretino s Orazia 1546 which nevertheless is found to be stiff distant and lacking in feeling 3 In 1570 the unities were codified and given new definition by Lodovico Castelvetro ca 1505 1571 in his influential translation and interpretation of Aristotle s Poetics Poetica d Aristotele vulgarizzata e sposta The Poetics of Aristotle translated in the Vulgar Language and commented on Though Castelvetro s translations are considered crude and inaccurate and though he at times altered Aristotle s meanings to make his own points his translations were influential and inspired the vast number of scholarly debates and discussions that followed all through Europe 4 5 France edit One hundred and twenty years after Sofonisba introduced the theory to Italy it then introduced the concept once again this time in France with a translation by Jean Mairet Voltaire said that the Sophonisba of Mairet had a merit which was then entirely new in France that of being in accordance with the rules of the theatre The three unities of action time and place are there strictly observed and the author was regarded as the father of the French stage The new rules caught on very quickly in France Corneille became an ardent supporter of them and in his plays from Le Cid 1636 to Surena 1674 he attempted to keep within the limits of time and place In 1655 he published his Trois Discours which includes his arguments for the unities Corneille s principles drew the support of Racine and Voltaire and for French playwrights they became hard rules and a heresy to disobey them Voltaire said All nations begin to regard as barbarous those times when even the greatest geniuses such as Lope de Vega and Shakespeare were ignorant of this system and they even confess the obligation they are under to us for having rescued them from this barbarism The fact that Corneille Racine Moliere Addison Congreve and Maffei have all observed the laws of the stage that ought to be enough to restrain any one who should entertain the idea of violating them 6 However in France opposition soon began to grow in the form of a Romantic movement that wanted freedom from the strictures of the classical unities It turned into a fierce literary conflict The opposition included Victor Hugo Alexandre Dumas and others Victor Hugo in the preface to his play Cromwell criticizes the unities saying in part Distinguished contemporaries foreigners and Frenchmen have already attacked both in theory and in practice that fundamental law of the pseudo Aristotelian code Indeed the combat was not likely to be a long one At the first blow it cracked so worm eaten was that timber of the old scholastic hovel 7 8 Hugo ridicules the unities of place and time but not the unity of action which he considers true and well founded The conflict came to a climax with the production of Victor Hugo s play Hernani at the Theatre Francais on the 21st of February 1830 It was reported that the two sides the Classicists and Romanticists both full of passion met as on a field of battle There was a lot of clamor in the theatre at each performance even some fist fights The newer Romantic movement carried the day and French playwrights no longer had to confine their plays to one location and have all of the action packed into one day 9 England edit The Classical Unities seem to have had less impact in England It had adherents in Ben Jonson and John Dryden Examples of plays that followed the theory include Thomas Otway s Venice Preserv d 1682 Joseph Addison s Cato and Samuel Johnson s Irene 1749 Shakespeare s The Tempest 1610 takes place almost entirely on an island during the course of four hours and with one major action that of Prospero reclaiming his role as the Duke of Milan It is suggested that Prospero s way of regularly checking the time of day during the play might be satirizing the concept of the unities In An Apology for Poetry 1595 Philip Sidney advocates for the unities and complains that English plays are ignoring them In Shakespeare s The Winter s Tale the chorus notes that the story makes a jump of 16 years Impute it not a crime To me or my swift passage that I slide O er sixteen years and leave the growth untried Of that wide gap 10 John Dryden discusses the unity of time in this passage criticizing Shakespeare s history plays they are rather so many Chronicles of Kings or the business many times of thirty or forty years crampt into a representation of two hours and a half which is not to imitate or paint Nature but rather to draw her in miniature to take her in little to look upon her through the wrong end of a Perspective and receive her Images not onely much less but infinitely more imperfect then the life this instead of making a Play delightful renders it ridiculous 11 Samuel Johnson in the preface to his edition of Shakespeare in 1773 rejects the previous dogma of the classical unities and argues that drama should be faithful to life The unities of time and place are not essential to a just drama and that though they may sometimes conduce to pleasure they are always to be sacrificed to the nobler beauties of variety and instruction and that a play written with nice observation of the critical rules is to be contemplated as an elaborate curiosity as the product of superfluous and ostentatious art by which is shown rather what is possible than what is necessary 12 After Johnson s critique interest seemed to turn away from the theory 13 14 John Pitcher in the Arden Shakespeare Third Series edition of The Winter s Tale 2010 suggests that Shakespeare was familiar with the unities due to an English translation of Poetics that became popular around 1608 15 Excerpts of Aristotle s Poetics editAristotle s Poetics may not have been available to Trissino when he formulated the unities and the term Aristotelian unities is considered a misnomer but in spite of this Aristotle s name became attached to the theory from the beginning As translations became available theorists have looked to the Poetics retrospectively for support of the concept 16 In these passages from the Poetics Aristotle considers action Tragedy then is a process of imitating an action which has serious implications is complete and possesses magnitude 17 A poetic imitation then ought to be unified in the same way as a single imitation in any other mimetic field by having a single object since the plot is an imitation of an action the latter ought to be both unified and complete and the component events ought to be so firmly compacted that if any one of them is shifted to another place or removed the whole is loosened up and dislocated for an element whose addition or subtraction makes no perceptible extra difference is not really a part of the whole 18 Aristotle considers length or time in a distinction between the epic and tragedy Well then epic poetry followed in the wake of tragedy up to the point of being a 1 good sized 2 imitation 3 in verse 4 of people who are to be taken seriously but in its having its verse unmixed with any other and being narrative in character there they differ Further so far as its length is concerned tragedy tries as hard as it can to exist during a single daylight period or to vary but little while the epic is not limited in its time and so differs in that respect 19 See also editHistory of theatre Theatre techniqueNotes edit Ascoli Albert Russell Renaissance Drama 36 37 Italy in the Drama of Europe Northwestern University Press 2010 p 46 56 ISBN 9780810124158 Simpson Edwin The Dramatic Unities Trubner amp Co 1878 Banham Martin and Brandon James eds The Cambridge Guide to Theatre Cambridge University Press 1995 ISBN 9780521434379 p 544 Clarke Barrett H European Theories of Drama Crown Publishers 1969 P 48 Urban Richard L All or Nothing at All Another Look at the Unity of Time in Aristotle The Classical Journal Vol 61 No 6 March 1966 pp 262 264 Simpson Edwin The Dramatic Unities Trubner amp Co 1878 Beck Theodore Toulon A Note on the Preface de Cromwell Italica Vol 39 No 3 Sep 1962 pp 197 204 Hugo Victor Oliver Cromwell Forgotten Books September 11 2017 pp i vi ISBN 978 1528244343 Simpson Edwin The Dramatic Unities Trubner amp Co 1878 p 55 60 Shakespeare William The Winter s Tale First Folio Act IV scene i line 3 6 Dryden An Essay of Dramatick Poesie 1668 para 56 Greene Donald 1989 Samuel Johnson Updated Edition Boston Twayne Publishers ISBN 08057 6962 5 Shakespeare William Vaughan Virginia Mason Vaughn Alden T editors The Tempest The Arden Shakespeare Third Series 1999 p 14 18 ISBN 9781903436 08 0 Friedland Louis Sigmund The Dramatic Unities in England The Journal of English and Germanic Philology Vol 10 No 1 Jan 1911 pp 56 89 Shakespeare William Pitcher John editor The Winter s Tale Third Series 2010 The Arden Shakespeare ISBN 9781903436356 Ascoli Albert Russell Renaissance Drama 36 37 Italy in the Drama of Europe Northwestern University Press 2010 p 46 56 ISBN 9780810124158 Aristotle Else Gerald F Aristotle Poetics University of Michigan Press 1967 p 25 ISBN 978 0472061662 Aristotle Else Gerald F Aristotle Poetics University of Michigan Press 1967 p 32 ISBN 978 0472061662 Aristotle Else Gerald F Aristotle Poetics University of Michigan Press 1967 p 24 ISBN 978 0472061662References editAristotle 1907 The Poetics of Aristotle Project Gutenberg e text 1974 Samuel Henry Butcher trans 4th ed London Macmillan OCLC 3113766 Dryden John 1668 Jack Lynch ed An Essay of Dramatick Poesie London Henry Harringman OCLC 4969880 Archived from the original Online reprint on 2005 07 31 Retrieved 2005 05 15 Johnson Samuel 2005 1765 Mr Johnson s Preface To his Edition of Shakespear s Plays Online reprint Ian Lancashire Ed online edition published by RPO Editors Department of English and University of Toronto Press as Samuel Johnson 1709 1784 Preface to his Edition of Shakespeare s Plays 1765 ed London J and R Tonson and others OCLC 10834559 External links editThe Poetics of Aristotle translated by Samuel Henry Butcher at Project Gutenberg Samuel Johnson Preface to Shakespeare at Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Classical unities amp oldid 1178826920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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