Talk:Poetic justice

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Poetic justice still not served[edit]

Seriously, the only poetic justice served here is the warning that calls for the entry to be more of a prose. Oh, the irony!

A thing[edit]

I think something should be added about the saying "Let the dead bury the dead," but I don't know where to put it. Jesin 21:11, 11 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Poetry vs. history[edit]

"Aristotle says that poetry is superior to history in that it shows what should or must occur, rather than merely what does occur." Where is the citation for this? I am not able to find a phrase supporting this in Aristotle's Poetics Bryannd 06:29, 18 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

At [[1]] I found

Let us now return to the points of contrast between poetry and history. Recall that there are two. First, poetry represents universals and history particulars, a difference that makes poetry more philosophical than history (9.1451a38-b7). Second, whereas poems (specifically, tragedies and epics) imitate a single, complete and whole action, a history concerns all the events in a single time that happened to one or more people and that relate to each other at random and have no single end (23.1459a17-30). Since a universal is a kind of unity (see Met. ƒ.26.1023b29-32), both contrasts are ways of saying that poems are unities and histories are not or are much less so.

O'RyanW ( ) 07:06, 18 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Is this wikipedia or TVTropes[edit]

Seriously people get your act together. Look at this garbage. The entire page is a list of examples. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 124.180.75.158 (talk) 11:55, 13 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

References needed[edit]

References are needed to verify the information in this article.-- Isaidnoway (talk) 21:34, 11 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Ironic twists are only present in modern literature?[edit]

Contrapasso and Karma are two concepts from older literature that make use of ironic twists of fate to bring about poetic justice. Despite that, one of the first lines reads "In modern literature, it is often accompanied by an ironic twist of fate related to the character's own action." This sounds to me like 'only modern literature has ironic twists'. I don't think this is true.

AustinPrince13 (talk) 06:51, 13 March 2016 (UTC)Austinprince[reply]