CATA 171
Intro to Theatre and 
Cinema
Chapter 2
Aristotle’s 
Guide to Pleasure
 
I.               
Aristotle: 
384-322 BC
A.   The Poetics
                                                     
i.     
Explains 
purpose of theatre
                                                      
ii.     
Provides 
methodology for analyzing form of theatre
                                                        
iii.     
Defines 6 
elements of theatre
B.    
Analyzed 
Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex
C.    
Primary 
purpose of all human activity is to provide pleasure
                                                     
i.     
Learning 
the truth, more than physical pleasure
D.  
Plays give greatest pleasure when their form observes 3 
Unities
 
II.             
Three 
Unities of Theatre
A.   Unity of Action
                                                     
i.     
Play should 
have only one simple plot
                                                      
ii.     
Less 
confusing to audience
                                                        
iii.     
Later 
Shakespeare and modern playwrights have challenged this
1.     Multiple 
plots
B.    
Unity of 
Time
                                                     
i.     
One passage 
of consecutive time
1.     Oedipus 
Rex a good 
example
2.     Some plays 
have audience live through same time as actors
                                                      
ii.     
Modern 
playwrights use flashbacks
C.    
Unity of 
Place
                                                     
i.     
Set action 
in one place
1.     Oedipus 
Rex in front of 
palace
2.     Shakespeare 
challenged this practice
3.     Modern 
audience accepts switching of place much more due to TV and 
film
 
III.           
Six 
Elements of Theatre
A.   No new elements have been identified 
since Aristotle
B.    
Elements 
listed in order of importance
                                                     
i.     
Plot
1.     Aristotle: 
Life and soul of Drama
2.     Until plot 
unfolds, there is no play
3.     Can be 
organized in many different ways
a.     Aristotle 
only knew of ones with beginning, middle and end
                                                                                                           
i.     
He called 
it the “arrangement of incidents.”
4.     Most modern 
plays have a plot that gives them a life and a soul
                                                      
ii.     
Character
1.     The agent 
for the action
2.     Play 
unfolds when characters enact incidents of plot
3.     Cannot 
exist independent of what they do
a.     Achieve 
their being through actions they perform
                                                        
iii.     
Thought
1.     Meaning of 
the play or “message.”
2.     Plot tells 
the audience a particular story and it’s universal idea
3.     Can be 
stated by distilling the plot to a single sentence
4.     Meaning can 
only be communicated through plot and plot can only be presented through 
characters
                                                        
iv.     
Diction
1.     Vocabulary 
playwright uses and order of words
2.     Not a 
synonym for articulation (muscular activity)
3.     Large 
vocabulary usually uses better grammar and signifies higher 
characters
4.     Small 
vocabulary denotes opposite
5.     Aristotle 
valued plays written with high language and in verse because he believed their 
diction gave the audience greatest pleasure
                                                      
v.     
Music
1.     Everything 
we hear in a performance
a.     Sound 
effects
b.     Musical 
accompaniment
c.     Sounds of 
actors’ voices
                                                                                                           
i.     
Speaking
                                                                                                            
ii.     
Chanting
                                                                                                              
iii.     
Singing
2.     Aristotle 
believed the more actors used their voices to embellish playwright’s word, the 
more deeply the audience would feel the characters’ 
emotions
3.     Classic 
plays often used high language and “musical” voices to provided pleasure to the 
audience, similar to how priests chant to add emotion to religious services or 
musical comedy characters burst into song to show 
happiness
                                                        
vi.     
Spectacle
1.     Aristotle 
believed what audience sees is least important
2.     Radio drama 
can support this thesis
3.     Today 
theatre uses visual spectacle (along with audio, etc.) much more than in classic 
theatre
a.     Modern 
audience has much higher capacity (through TV) to absorb large spectacle that 
moves quickly and assaults the senses
b.     Spectacle, 
however, was important in Middle Ages to teach Biblical 
stories
IV.       Aristotle’s 
six elements provide excellent tools for analyzing and evaluating a play or 
film