rdfs:comment
| - TBA
- 10/24/1996
- A tragedy is a type of literature where an honorable character suffers their downfall, sometimes a fault of their own and others due to external forces. William Shakespeare wrote many tragedies, such as Julius Caesar, King Lear, Macbeth, Othello and Romeo and Juliet. Elim Garak thought that the fact that he saw that Brutus would kill Julius Caesar in the first act meant that Julius Caesar was more a farcical play than a tragedy. Julian Bashir disagreed, as he felt that the fact that Caesar did not suspect his best friend of plotting his murder was the tragedy. (DS9: "Improbable Cause")
- Tragedy is the thirteenth episode of .hack//Roots. Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
- Como su nombre lo indica, esta canción aparece en momentos tristes y desfavorables, como la muerte de algún personaje, etc. Categoría:Soundtracks
- TRAGEDY is a track in the BIOHAZARD Operation Raccoon City ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK album.
- "Tragedy" is a song recorded by the Bee Gees, included as the first track on their 1979 album Spirits Having Flown. The single held the No. 1 spot in the UK and US for two weeks. The "booms" heard later in the song are the sound of Barry cupping his hands over the microphone and creating an explosion sound. This was revealed in NBC's "The Bee Gees Special".
- Tragedy es el vigésimo segundo soundtrack del álbum Naruto Shippuden Original Soundtrack, su compositor es Takanashi Yasuharu. Posee una duración de 2.31 minutos, y su nombre en español es "Tragedia". Como su nombre lo indica, esta canción aparece en momentos tristes y desfavorables, como la muerte de algún personaje, etc. Categoría:Soundtracks
- Detectives Benson and Stabler try to find a kidnapped woman with a high-risk pregnancy.
- Tragedy is a member of the Brethren Court as well as the political figurehead for the Brethren. Along with being one of the top people in the Brethren he is also the head person on Bastion regarding smuggling, piracy, and anything else illegal you can find.
- Tragedy - so-named for the mask he wears - was part of a dream that Susan Ivanova had. He is a representation of one of the Psi Corps people who came to her house when she was a young child and forced her mother, Sofie Ivanov to take Sleepers.
- In a sentence, you could say that Tragedy concerns itself with the fall of a great man due to his own mistakes and/or flaws. As a genre, tragedy is Older Than Feudalism. It has changed quite a bit since its conception in ancient Greece, and nowadays is a dying genre... how tragic! Soon it will be just as dead as Irony. Common tragedies are: Greek Tragedy, Shakespearean Tragedy, and the more recent Bourgeois Tragedy. Tragedy is directly opposed to Comedy. Greek tragedy in general is the Trope Namer for Deus Ex Machina. Examples of Tragedy include:
- Tragedy (Ancient Greek: ="grc" xml:lang="grc" >τραγῳδία, tragōidia, "he-goat-song") is a form of drama based on human suffering that invokes in its audience an accompanying catharsis or pleasure in the viewing. While many cultures have developed forms that provoke this paradoxical response, the term tragedy often refers to a specific tradition of drama that has played a unique and important role historically in the self-definition of Western civilization. That tradition has been multiple and discontinuous, yet the term has often been used to invoke a powerful effect of cultural identity and historical continuity—"the Greeks and the Elizabethans, in one cultural form; Hellenes and Christians, in a common activity," as Raymond Williams puts it.
- In a sentence, you could say that Tragedy concerns itself with the fall of a great man due to his own mistakes and/or flaws. As a genre, tragedy is Older Than Feudalism. It has changed quite a bit since its conception in ancient Greece, and nowadays is a dying genre... how tragic! Soon it will be just as dead as Irony. Common tragedies are: Greek Tragedy, Shakespearean Tragedy, and the more recent Bourgeois Tragedy. Tragedy is directly opposed to Comedy. Greek tragedy in general is the Trope Namer for Deus Ex Machina.
- Why a bunch of olive pickers on sun loungers came up with tragedy as a concept is an unexplainable fact of history. That is not to say 'Tragedy' didn't exist before but that it wasn't recognised or put down to God, Jehovah or something with an animal's head. The Greeks regarded their myths and stories as the workings of fate, pre-decided by three old crones sitting in a room weaving every individual's pre-supposed life trajectory. But that made it a bit boring. Like reading the end of the book, where was the fun in that? This is what the Athenians did and it was there that the idea of creating competitive literary festivals were born. The winner would win a free goat ( tragōidia in Greek) - hence 'tragedy'. Losers would receive a troll. (and become one too.)
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