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In other words, the parody is not a total mimesis.
Mimesis shows rather than tells, by means of action that is enacted.
Comedy is the third form of literature, being the most divorced from a true mimesis.
The music's history and performance in the Czech lands, however, make it more than simple example of mimesis.
Art as mimesis has deep roots in the philosophy of Aristotle.
He's not afraid to give his chapters titles like "Mimesis."
Mimesis also refers to imitation, especially relating to the arts.
The problem is to explain the transition from one form of mimesis, imitation, to another, representation.
Literature in general is defined by Aristotle as a mimesis, or imitation of life.
Not too many people seem to be able to grasp the proper pronunciation of the word Mimesis.
Mimesis is an imitation, coming directly from the Greek.
The requirement of mimesis compelled inventors to find a model for their designs in nature.
It is literariness and not mimesis which interests the Formalists.
The Greeks referred to the reliance on visual observation as mimesis.
Mimesis Republic is now an internationally known brand name.
Mimesis; Plato's doctrine of artistic imitation and its meaning to us, 1949.
It was about showing how mimesis was understood in the various historical contexts.
Both Plato and Aristotle saw in mimesis the representation of nature.
Poetics is his treatise on the subject of mimesis.
Mimesis is also employed by some predators and parasites to lure their prey.
A common classical idea of beautiful art involves the word mimesis, the imitation of nature.
It is not possible, in Brecht's view, to produce a neutral mimesis.
Art has been characterized in terms of mimesis, expression, communication of emotion, or other values.
"Mimesis," printed as if written on a manual typewriter, ends with the admission that words are not enough.
In mimesis (also called masquerade), the camouflaged object looks like something else which is of no special interest to the observer.