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When a character in a traditional tragedy understands that there is no turning back and must continue on despite the circumstances this is called tragic?

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Tragic irretrievability is the term used when a character in a classic tragedy realizes there is no going back and must go on despite the circumstances.

What does tragic irrecoverability mean?

settings or circumstances that are impossible to respectably escape from.

What is classical tragedy, exactly?

The fundamental focus of tragedy, a form of drama based on human misery, is tragic events that happen to a main character (from the Greek: tragidia). The audience is often meant to experience catharsis, which is defined as "pain [that] awakens pleasure," as a result of tragic events.

Tragic writing

In his "Poetics," Aristotle outlines the elements of classical tragedy mostly based on the works of Aeschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles. The transition of a high-status hero from fortune to misfortune is a single scene that mimics the traditional tragedy's key action. Instead of vice or depravity, the "tragic fault," or some oversight or flaw in an otherwise moral protagonist, must be what leads to the fall. The purpose of tragedy, according to Aristotle, is to elicit empathy and dread in the audience, which leads to a catharsis, or cleansing, of these emotions.

to learn more about classic tragedies, go to brainly.com/question/2491031

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