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Hubris
Exaggerated self-pride, self-confidence, or overbearing pride, often resulting in fatal retribution. It was considered the greatest sin of the ancient world. Is used today to refer to people who believe they are exempt from ordinary limitations on human behavior.
Hamartia
A protagonist's positive personality trait that, due to excessiveness, brings about his tragic downfall.
Ate
The blind recklessness frequently displayed by tragic heroes who act impulsively and refuse to listen to the advice of others. This complicates the play's conflict and leads to the tragic outcomes of the plot.
Anagnorisis
The point at which a tragic hero becomes aware of, or accepts, the fact of his or her error in judgment. This often occurs near the climax of the tragedy's conflict.
Reversal
The tragic hero's change in behavior resulting from their recognition of error. In tragedy, the events set in motion by the tragic characters' actions are generally too advanced for the hero's reversal, of course, to bring about change.
Peripeteia
A sudden reversal of fortune or change in circumstances, especially in reference to a fictional narrative.
Nemesis
The force that brings down the powerful and arrogant.
Catharsis
Purging of the emotions of pity and fear that are aroused in the viewer of a tragedy.
The purpose of tragedy for the tragic hero
Is to learn wisdom and to accept their limitations as humans before the laws of the gods. In short, the high is to be brought low so they can see the roots of their error.
Purpose of tragedy for the audience
To experience pathos (the sympathy and sorrow felt by the audience for the tragic hero) or sympathy for the suffering experienced by the tragic hero as a result of his or her unwitting error in judgment.