La mimesis aristotélica más allá de los límites de la Poética

From Renaissance on, Aristotelian mimesis had exerted its influence mainly through the principie that "art imitates nature". This principie was interpreted in different and multiple ways reaching its most categorical rejection with nineteenth-century aestheticism. What is surprising is tha...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Suñol, Viviana
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Español
Materias:
Art
Acceso en línea:https://www.memoria.fahce.unlp.edu.ar/art_revistas/pr.11125/pr.11125.pdf
http://revistas.iel.unicamp.br/index.php/phaos/article/view/3456
Aporte de:Registro referencial: Solicitar el recurso aquí
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500 |a Documento incorporado en 2019 en el marco del "Programa de becas de experiencia laboral" de la Biblioteca Profesor Guillermo Obiols para estudiantes de Bibliotecología, a partir de un procedimiento técnico de captura de datos desarrollado por el personal del IdIHCS. 
520 3 |a From Renaissance on, Aristotelian mimesis had exerted its influence mainly through the principie that "art imitates nature". This principie was interpreted in different and multiple ways reaching its most categorical rejection with nineteenth-century aestheticism. What is surprising is that this principie was neve r explicitly enunciated in the Poetics as subject of the téchne poietiké, although it is frequently mentioned in different treatises devoted to the study of natural history, e.g. Meteor., Phys., Protr., etc. 1n the first pari of this paper, I present a brief examination of some passages that I believe gives evidence of the analogical value that mimetic vocabulary usually has in Aristotle. Then, in the second part I analyze the different formulations of the principie in the corpus in order to elucidate the complex relation of analogy and supplementation between the sphere of art and that of nature. My attempt contradicts Halliwell's interpretation (1999 & 2002), to whom it is imperative to distinguish the wider uses of the term from the proper artistic signification of mimesis in Aristotle's Poetics 
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