Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview

Tragedy is one of those terms which refers both to a specific literary genre and to a general world view. The two meanings are to be distinguished but cannot perhaps be fully separated since the ambiguous relation between art and life underwrites the power and significance of the form. At the same t...

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Main Author: Michael Bell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de Paris Nanterre 2021-01-01
Series:Études Lawrenciennes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/lawrence/2193
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spelling doaj-97b878aae6274de8a7482f0f4de9affc2021-02-09T15:44:38ZengPresses Universitaires de Paris NanterreÉtudes Lawrenciennes0994-54902272-40012021-01-015210.4000/lawrence.2193Tragedy as Genre and/or WorldviewMichael BellTragedy is one of those terms which refers both to a specific literary genre and to a general world view. The two meanings are to be distinguished but cannot perhaps be fully separated since the ambiguous relation between art and life underwrites the power and significance of the form. At the same time this relation has a different meaning when approached from either side. Lawrence’s remark that “tragedy ought really to be a great kick at misery” sits at the heart of this ambiguity. It seems to be a Nietzschean affirmation of life through the tragic experience; an affirmation for which Yeats’s poem “Lapis Lazuli” provides perhaps the most striking example in English. Yet Lawrence was hostile to the mode of aestheticism represented by Nietzsche and Yeats. Where they assimilate life into art, he constantly distrusts any art, even an affirmative one, that claims a privileged standpoint on life.http://journals.openedition.org/lawrence/2193nihilismworld-viewlifeambiguityNietzscheYeats
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Bell
spellingShingle Michael Bell
Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview
Études Lawrenciennes
nihilism
world-view
life
ambiguity
Nietzsche
Yeats
author_facet Michael Bell
author_sort Michael Bell
title Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview
title_short Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview
title_full Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview
title_fullStr Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview
title_full_unstemmed Tragedy as Genre and/or Worldview
title_sort tragedy as genre and/or worldview
publisher Presses Universitaires de Paris Nanterre
series Études Lawrenciennes
issn 0994-5490
2272-4001
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Tragedy is one of those terms which refers both to a specific literary genre and to a general world view. The two meanings are to be distinguished but cannot perhaps be fully separated since the ambiguous relation between art and life underwrites the power and significance of the form. At the same time this relation has a different meaning when approached from either side. Lawrence’s remark that “tragedy ought really to be a great kick at misery” sits at the heart of this ambiguity. It seems to be a Nietzschean affirmation of life through the tragic experience; an affirmation for which Yeats’s poem “Lapis Lazuli” provides perhaps the most striking example in English. Yet Lawrence was hostile to the mode of aestheticism represented by Nietzsche and Yeats. Where they assimilate life into art, he constantly distrusts any art, even an affirmative one, that claims a privileged standpoint on life.
topic nihilism
world-view
life
ambiguity
Nietzsche
Yeats
url http://journals.openedition.org/lawrence/2193
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelbell tragedyasgenreandorworldview
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