The three unities or classical unities are rules for drama derived from Aristotle's Poetics. In their neoclassical form they are as follows:
Aristotle dealt with the unity of action in some detail, under the general subject of "definition of tragedy", where he wrote:
He mentions the unity of time, but only to explain the difference between the epic and tragic forms:
Aristotle was writing after the golden age of Greek drama, and many Greek playwrights, notably Aeschylus, wrote plays that do not fit within these conventions. Aristotle does not mention the unity of place. Italian critics of the 16th century, from Lodovico Castelvetro onwards, and then 17th century French critics, proponents of the neoclassical movement, both expanded Aristotle's descriptions. The result was to make them into hard-and-fast rules or prescrptions for how any play must be structured. French drama of the 17th century, particularly that of Molière and Racine was highly regular; whereas the English dramatists writing for the Jacobethan stage were largely unaware of these strictures.
By the later 17th century, however, English dramatists (under the influence of French criticism picked up by those in exile during the English Interregnum) did begin to assess their own plays according to these rules. Thus, John Dryden, among many others, compares the "irregular" Shakespeare with the "regular" Ben Jonson in his Essay of Dramatick Poesie (1668), and makes use of the unity of time in this passage criticizing Shakespeare's history plays:
Alexander Pope criticizes the violation of the unities in his Dunciad. In the 1728 version of the poem, the goddess Dulness notes that "Time himself stands still at her command,/ Realms shift their place, and Ocean turns to land" (Dunciad 1728, i, 69–70). Additionally, he notes a violation of unity of action, as tragedy and comedy were mixed.
Even Samuel Johnson was not free of applying the unities to drama when judging it in his Prefaces to Shakespeare. However, Johnson was well aware that Aristotle had only recommended the unity of action, and knew that rules must serve drama, not vice versa:
The classical unities were influential in dramatic criticism until Victor Hugo's Hernani (1844); one of the things that made that play controversial at its debut was its violation of these rule of classicism.
Drama | Theatre | History of theater | Ancient Greek theatre
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Classical unities".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world