PHOTOS X-MAS GIFT MEMORIES: ANTONIO BROWN GEBE….IT’S CALL ‘CATHARSIS’ all ‘work’ judith roumou

When somebody START shit with YOU…….It’s NOT over ’til YOU say its over. How do you start shit with someone, then want to call a truce??? There will be a truce when I declare a truce. You run to Hilbert Haar, you RAN to the police, you ran to the prosecutor, you RAN to every attorney, nobody could help you…….THEY CAN’T HELP THEMSELVES!!! Catharsis is when you cleanse yourself of certain perceived negative emotions so that they don’t destroy you like they should. How many people in St Maarten allow themselves to be abused,and misused- AND THEY KEEP IT ALL IN!! Because they are told to take the “high road” and to ignore the person. What happens?? Heart Attack, Brain aneurysm, stroke!!!

NO JOKE!!!!

It’s a LOT different when you’re the target, when you are the victim, when you are considered ‘prey’ by a bunch a government vultures who think they’ve seen it all.

They got their little Associates Degree and Bachelors Degree in slander, libel and smear at the University of Sarah Wescot Williams, at the Julian Rollocks campus. Well I came back to St Maarten with my Online Masters and PHD , via the University of Hard Knocks, the Roumou Campus.

When YOU”RE the butt of the joke, you stop laughing,  and its not so funny after all. So my catharsis was to do to my critics what they did to me…..just a million times better :). I never have to go on another radio program, I never have to go on another TV program to get my point across, I don’t need to go to the newspaper or the local so called journalist….

ALL I HAVE TO DO IS HIT “REBLOG’ ALL DAY!!

And I can reblog to hundreds a sites, youtubes, google…you name it. The skies the limit, I have NO idea how many names and accounts I have.

ALL DAY, ANTONIO BROWN YOU GEBE PUNK..AND I GET CATHARSIS…..

IT’S THERAPEUTIC….

HOW CAN THAT BE WRONG??? :

I might just switch Billy D gezicht with your gezicht, it would take two seconds, but the pleasure it induced would be timeless.

REBLOG 🙂 :

 

Catharsis

For other uses, see Catharsis (disambiguation).
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Catharsis (from the Greek κάθαρσις katharsis meaning “purification” or “cleansing”) is the purification and purgation of emotions—especially pity and fear—through art[1] or any extreme change in emotion that results in renewal and restoration.[2][3] It is a metaphor originally used by Aristotle in the Poetics to describe the effects of tragedy on the spectator.[4][5]

Dramatic uses[edit]

Catharsis is a term in dramatic art that describes the effect of tragedy (or comedy and quite possibly other artistic forms)[6] principally on the audience (although some have speculated on characters in the drama as well). Nowhere does Aristotle explain the meaning of “catharsis” as he is using that term in the definition of tragedy in the Poetics (1449b21-28). G.F. Else argues that traditional, widely held interpretations of catharsis as “purification ” or “purgation” have no basis in the text of thePoetics, but are derived from the use of catharsis in other Aristotelian and non-Aristotelian contexts,” Leon Golden writes.[7] For this reason, a number of diverse interpretations of the meaning of this term have arisen. D.W. Lucas (Aristotle: Poetics, Oxford, 1968)[8] in an authoritative edition of the Poetics comprehensively covers the various nuances inherent in the meaning of the term in an Appendix devoted to “Pity, Fear, and Katharsis”. Lucas (pp. 276–79) recognizes the possibility of catharsis bearing some aspect of the meaning of “purification, purgation, and ‘intellectual clarification'” although his discussion of these terms is not always, or perhaps often, in the precise form with which other influential scholars have treated them. Lucas himself does not accept any one of these interpretations as his own but adopts a rather different one based on “the Greek doctrine of Humours” which has not received wide subsequent acceptance. Purgation and purification, used in previous centuries, as the common interpretations of catharsis are still in wide use today.[9] More recently, in the twentieth century, the interpretation of catharsis as “intellectual clarification” has arisen as a rival to the older views in describing the effect of catharsis on members of the audience.

Purgation and purification[edit]

In his works prior to Poetics, Aristotle had used the term catharsis purely in its medical sense (usually referring to the evacuation of the katamenia—the menstrual fluid or other reproductive material).[10] Here, however, he employs it as a medical metaphorF. L. Lucas maintains, therefore, that purification and cleansing are not proper translations for catharsis; that it should rather be rendered as purgation. “It is the human soul that is purged of its excessive passions.”[11] Gerald F. Else, “Aristotle’s Poetics: The Argument, Cambridge, Mass., 1957, p.440 made the following argument against the “purgation” theory: “It presupposes that we come to the tragic drama (unconsciously, if you will) as patients to be cured, relieved, restored to psychic health. But there is not a word to support this in the “Poetics”, not a hint that the end of drama is to cure or alleviate pathological states. On the contrary it is evident in every line of the work that Aristotle is presupposing “normal” auditors, normal states of mind and feeling, normal emotional and aesthetic experience.”

Lessing sidesteps the medical attribution. He translates catharsis as a purification, an experience that brings pity and fear into their proper balance: “In real life,” he explained, “men are sometimes too much addicted to pity or fear, sometimes too little; tragedy brings them back to a virtuous and happy mean.”[12] Tragedy is then a corrective; through watching tragedy, the audience learns how to feel these emotions at proper levels.

Intellectual clarification[edit]

In the twentieth century something like a paradigm shift took place in the interpretation of catharsis with a number of scholars contributing to the argument in support of the intellectual clarification concept. The following works can be usefully consulted in this regard: L. Golden, “Aristotle on Tragic and Comic Mimesis,” Atlanta, 1992, S. Halliwell, “Aristotle’s Poetics,” London, 1986, D. Keesey, “On Some Recent Interpretations of Catharsis, “The Classical World”, (1979) 72.4, 193-205. The clarification theory of catharsis would be fully consistent, as other interpretations are not, with Aristotle’s argument in chapter 4 of the Poetics (1448b4-17) that the essential pleasure of mimesis is the intellectual pleasure of “learning and inference”.

It is generally understood that Aristotle’s theory of mimesis and catharsis are responses to Plato‘s negative view of artistic mimesis on an audience. Plato argued that the most common forms of artistic mimesis were designed to evoke from an audience powerful emotions such as pity, fear, and ridicule which override the rational control that defines the highest level of our humanity and lead us to wallow unacceptably in orgies of emotion and passion. Aristotle’s concept of catharsis, in all of the major senses attributed to it, contradicts Plato’s view by providing a mechanism that generates the rational control of irrational emotions. All of the commonly held interpretations of catharsis, purgation, purification, and clarification are considered by most scholars to represent a homeopathic process in which pity and fear accomplish the catharsis of emotions like themselves. For an alternate view of catharsis as an allopathic process in which pity and fear produce a catharsis of emotions unlike pity and fear, see E. Belfiore, “Tragic Pleasures: Aristotle on Plot and Emotion.” Princeton, 1992, 260 ff.

Achieving catharsis in literary analysis[edit]

Catharsis can only be achieved by an accurate and persuasive analysis of character and action in a drama. Below is such an analysis by the distinguished British scholar E.R. Dodds directed at the character of Oedipus in the paradigmatic Aristotelian tragedy, Oedipus Rex:

“…what fascinates us is the spectacle of a man freely choosing, from the highest motives a series of actions which lead to his own ruin. Oedipus might have left the plague to take its course; but pity for the sufferings of his people compelled him to consult Delphi. When Apollo’s word came back, he might still have left the murder of Laius uninvestigated; but piety and justice required him to act. He need not have forced the truth from the reluctant Theban herdsman; but because he cannot rest content with a lie, he must tear away the last veil from the illusion in which he has lived so long. Teiresias, Jocasta, the herdsman, each in turn tries to stop him, but in vain; he must read the last riddle, the riddle of his own life. The immediate cause of Oedipus’ ruin is not “fate or “the gods”—no oracle said that he must discover the truth—and still less does it lie in his own weakness; what causes his ruin is his own strength and courage, his loyalty to Thebes, and his loyalty to the truth.” (E.R. Dodds, “On Misunderstanding the Oedipus Rex,” “Greece and Rome 13 ((1966) p.43.”

The cogent logic of Dodds’ analysis makes it possible for us to argue for the existence of a catharsis for diverse reasons based on any of the three major interpretations we have discussed: purgation, purification, intellectual clarification.

There have been, for political or aesthetic reasons, deliberate attempts made to subvert the effect of catharsis in theatre. For example, Bertolt Brecht viewed catharsis as a pap (pablum) for thebourgeois theatre audience, and designed dramas which left significant emotions unresolved, intending to force social action upon the audience. Brecht reasoned that the absence of a cathartic resolution would require the audience to take political action in the real world, in order to fill the emotional gap they had experienced vicariously. This technique can be seen as early as his agit-prop play The Measures Taken.[citation needed]

“Catharsis” before tragedy[edit]

Catharsis before the sixth-century rise of tragedy is, for the Western World, essentially a historical footnote to the Aristotelian conception. The practice of purification had not yet appeared inHomer, as later Greek commentators noted:[13] the Aithiopis, an epic set in the Trojan War cycle, narrates the purification of Achilles after his murder of Thersites. Catharsis describes the result of measures taken to cleanse away blood-guilt—”blood is purified through blood” (Burkert 1992:56), a process in the development of Hellenistic culture in which the oracle of Delphi took a prominent role. The classic example—Orestes—belongs to tragedy, but the procedure given by Aeschylus is ancient: the blood of a sacrificed piglet is allowed to wash over the blood-polluted man, and running water washes away the blood.[14] The identical ritual is represented, Burkert informs us (1992:57), on a krater found at Canicattini, wherein it is shown being employed to cure the daughters of Proetus from their madness, caused by some ritual transgression. To the question of whether the ritual obtains atonement for the subject, or just healing, Burkert answers: “To raise the question is to see the irrelevance of this distinction” (1992:57).

Therapeutic uses[edit]

In psychology, the term was first employed by Sigmund Freud‘s colleague Josef Breuer (1842–1925), who developed a “cathartic” treatment using hypnosis for persons suffering from hystericalsymptoms. While under hypnosis, Breuer’s patients were able to recall traumatic experiences, and through the process of expressing the original emotions that had been repressed and forgotten, they were relieved of their symptoms. Catharsis was also central to Freud’s concept of psychoanalysis, but he replaced hypnosis with free association.[15]

The term catharsis has also been adopted by modern psychotherapy, particularly Freudian psychoanalysis, to describe the act of expressing, or more accurately, experiencing the deep emotions often associated with events in the individual’s past which had originally been repressed or ignored, and had never been adequately addressed or experienced.

There has been much debate about the use of catharsis in the reduction of anger. Some scholars believe that “blowing off steam” may reduce physiological stress in the short term, but this reduction may act as a reward mechanism, reinforcing the behavior and promoting future outbursts.[16][17][18][19] However, other studies have suggested that using violent media may decrease hostility under periods of stress.[20] Interestingly, there’s no “one size fits all” definition of “catharsis”,[21] and this doesn’t allow a clear definition of its use in therapeutical terms.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. Jump up^ “catharsis,” Merriam-Webster’s Encyclopedia of Literature, Merriam-Webster, 1995, p. 217.
  2. Jump up^ A. Berndtson (1975), p. 235: “The theory of catharsis has a disarming affinity with the expressional theory, since it emphasizes emotion, asserts a change in emotion as a result of aesthetic operations, and concludes on a note of freedom in relation to the emotion”.
  3. Jump up^ R. Levin (2003), p. 42: “Catharsis in Shakespearean tragedy involves … some kind of restoration of order and a renewal or enhancement of our positive feelings for the hero”.
  4. Jump up^ Aristotle, Poetics1449b
  5. Jump up^ “catharsis (criticism)” — Encyclopedia Britannica
  6. Jump up^ Thomas Scheff PhD Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Anthropology (1979). Catharsis in Healing, Ritual, and Drama. University of California, USA. ISBN 0-595-15237-6.
  7. Jump up^ Golden, Leon. “Catharsis”. Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 93: 51–60.
  8. Jump up^ Lucas, DW (1977). Aristotle: Poetics. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0198140245.
  9. Jump up^ Michael P. Nichols, Ph D.; Melvin Zax, Ph.D. (8 June 1977). Catharsis in Psychotherapy. John Wiley & Sons Inc, New York. ISBN 978-0470990643.
  10. Jump up^ Belifiore, Elizabeth S. Tragic Pleasures: Aristotle on Plot and Emotion, page 300. Princeton UP, 1992
  11. Jump up^ Lucas, F.L. Tragedy in Relation to Aristotle’s Poetics, page 24
  12. Jump up^ Lucas, F.L. Tragedy in Relation to Aristotle’s Poetics, page 23. Hogarth, 1928
  13. Jump up^ Walter Burkert, 1992. The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture in the Early Archaic Age, p.56. (Harvard University Press). This sub-section depends largely on Burkert.
  14. Jump up^ Burkert notes parallels with a bilingual AkkadianSumerian ritual text: “the knowledgeable specialist, the sacrificial piglet, slaughter, contact with blood, and the subsequent cleansing with water” (1992:58).
  15. Jump up^ Strickland, Bonnie, ed. (2001). Catharsis. Gale.
  16. Jump up^ Bushman, BJ; RF Baumeister, and AD Stack (1999-03). “Catharsis, aggression, and persuasive influence: self-fulfilling or self-defeating prophecies?”. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 76 (3): 367–376. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.76.3.367PMID 10101875.
  17. Jump up^ Gannon, Theresa A. (2007). “Aggressive offenders’ cognition: theory, research, and practice”. In Theresa A. Gannon, Tony Ward, Anthony R. Beech, and Dawn Fisher. Wiley series in forensic clinical psychology 35 (John Wiley & Sons). ISBN 978-0-470-03401-9.
  18. Jump up^ Baron, Robert A.; Deborah R. Richardson (2004). “Catharsis: does “getting it out of one’s system” really help?”. Human AggressionSpringerISBN 978-0-306-48434-6.
  19. Jump up^ Denzler, Markus; Jens Förster and Nira Liberman (2009-01). “How goal-fulfillment decreases aggression”. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 45 (1): 90–100.doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2008.08.021.
  20. Jump up^ Ferguson, Christopher; Stephanie Rueda (2010). “The Hitman study: Violent video game exposure effects on aggressive behavior, hostile feelings and depression”European Psychologist 15 (2): 99–108.
  21. Jump up^ http://primal-page.com/cathar.htm

References[edit]

External links[edit]

  •  The dictionary definition of catharsis at Wiktionary
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