Catharsis: the purging of the emotions or relieving of emotional tensions, esp. through certain kinds of art, as tragedy or music.
The Greeks knew the power of cathartic moments and captured them in ancient dramas for thespians and audiences alike to witness, empathize with, and, ideally, to transform. The pivotal aspect of catharsis for the thespian is an inward moment of despair and where it takes the actor in his journey downward to the depths emotional pain needed for the performance.
For audiences, we journey by witnessing the pain, often connecting with it, sometimes reflecting upon it, and, if we are susceptible to the power of the drama, its words, its intentions, and those who preform it, we purge our own emotions purposefully allowing a transformation of our emotional and moral landscape.
Landscapes are manifold. Hence, our world's landscape is diverse, and within it the individuals who create these expanses too. Amid these diverse settings, we each have our own modern methods of catharsis from blogging, `facebooking', painting, sculpting, playing music, creating in some capacity a space for purging. We purge our ideas, emotions, talents, tastes, and intellectual meandering, sometimes privately other times publicly.
I posit that the purpose of the intersection of catharsis and creativity was, and is, to reform the cultural landscapes into vast expanses of common sense, compassion, and codified values. Essentially, drama marks an attempt to establish and re-assert values to the audiences for which they are performed. Is your purging purposeful? If not, how might you make it so in an effort to be the change you wish to see in the world?
My personal challenge is to do just that; provide time and space for the purging and the passion to re-invigorate my world...and those whose lives cross it.
Monday, January 5, 2009
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