Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence

Drawing mainly upon the thinking of Kenneth Burke, this essay overviews a few psychological functions performed within dramatic works of art. It shows how dramatic works of art (e.g. novels, plays, films, and even TV shows) operate as subtle modes of applied psychology: they offer different types of...

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Main Author: Corey Anton
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences, A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature 2020-11-01
Series:Литература двух Америк
Subjects:
Online Access:http://litda.ru/images/2020-9/LDA-2020-9_43-59_Anton.pdf
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author Corey Anton
author_facet Corey Anton
author_sort Corey Anton
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description Drawing mainly upon the thinking of Kenneth Burke, this essay overviews a few psychological functions performed within dramatic works of art. It shows how dramatic works of art (e.g. novels, plays, films, and even TV shows) operate as subtle modes of applied psychology: they offer different types of therapeutic benefits for those who produce such works and also for those readers who read them and/or audience members who witness them. I try to bring out how modes of catharsis as well as means of transcendence are afforded by dramatic form within art. Even more specifically stated, I review some of Burke’s ruminations upon his own semiautobiographical novel, Towards a Better Life, and I outline how dramatic works of art provide adequate symbolic distance for sizing up one’s life situations and for facing various challenges that can otherwise be too difficult to face head-on. Through symbolic and artistic maneuvers, which enable kinds of identification, authors and audience members learn to face their demons and gain new psychological resolves and/or vistas of self-understanding.
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spelling doaj.art-dbd11be1398b4a3d81d8d62863cfeb422022-12-21T20:31:58ZdeuRussian Academy of Sciences, A.M. Gorky Institute of World LiteratureЛитература двух Америк2541-78942542-243X2020-11-019435910.22455/2541-7894-2020-9-43-59Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and TranscendenceCorey Anton0Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan USADrawing mainly upon the thinking of Kenneth Burke, this essay overviews a few psychological functions performed within dramatic works of art. It shows how dramatic works of art (e.g. novels, plays, films, and even TV shows) operate as subtle modes of applied psychology: they offer different types of therapeutic benefits for those who produce such works and also for those readers who read them and/or audience members who witness them. I try to bring out how modes of catharsis as well as means of transcendence are afforded by dramatic form within art. Even more specifically stated, I review some of Burke’s ruminations upon his own semiautobiographical novel, Towards a Better Life, and I outline how dramatic works of art provide adequate symbolic distance for sizing up one’s life situations and for facing various challenges that can otherwise be too difficult to face head-on. Through symbolic and artistic maneuvers, which enable kinds of identification, authors and audience members learn to face their demons and gain new psychological resolves and/or vistas of self-understanding.http://litda.ru/images/2020-9/LDA-2020-9_43-59_Anton.pdfkenneth burkedramatic formcatharsistranscendencegreek mythologyformal causalityfinal causalityperseus mythpopular culture.
spellingShingle Corey Anton
Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence
Литература двух Америк
kenneth burke
dramatic form
catharsis
transcendence
greek mythology
formal causality
final causality
perseus myth
popular culture.
title Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence
title_full Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence
title_fullStr Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence
title_full_unstemmed Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence
title_short Facing the Gorgon: Kenneth Burke on Dramatic Form, Catharsis, and Transcendence
title_sort facing the gorgon kenneth burke on dramatic form catharsis and transcendence
topic kenneth burke
dramatic form
catharsis
transcendence
greek mythology
formal causality
final causality
perseus myth
popular culture.
url http://litda.ru/images/2020-9/LDA-2020-9_43-59_Anton.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT coreyanton facingthegorgonkennethburkeondramaticformcatharsisandtranscendence