twitter
78
edits
EnigmaTowles (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
EnigmaTowles (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The tragic [[protagonist]]’s flaw that precipitates his/her [[peripeteia | fall]] from a position of good fortune to bad fortune, often associated with his/her overweening [[hubris]], and integral to [[tragedy]]. <i>Hamartia</i> is a term taken from archery, meaning “falling short of the mark,” but it also suggests “sin,” “trespass,” “fault,” “mistake,” “error,” etc. The term derives from the word, <i>hamartanein</i>, which is Greek for "fail, failure, guilt or to fail one's purpose." | The tragic [[protagonist]]’s flaw that precipitates his/her [[peripeteia | fall]] from a position of good fortune to bad fortune, often associated with his/her overweening [[hubris]], and integral to [[tragedy]]. <i>Hamartia</i> is a term taken from archery, meaning “falling short of the mark,” but it also suggests “sin,” “trespass,” “fault,” “mistake,” “error,” etc. The term derives from the word, <i>hamartanein</i>, which is Greek for "fail, failure, guilt or to fail one's purpose." The word is notable to many from <i>Poetics</i> by Aristotle. | ||
== Examples of "Hamartia" in Literature == | == Examples of "Hamartia" in Literature == |