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Drama I

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Monologue and Soliloquy. Monologue: A long speech in which a character talks to him- or herself. ... Example: Soliloquy from Hamlet. To be, or not to be, that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drama I


1
Drama I
2
Drama vs. Prose
  • Epic narratives
  • Dramatic narratives

3
Text and Performance
  • A play is a multimedial form designed to be
    staged in a public performance. A play is
    'multimedial' in the sense that it uses both
    auditory and visual media a play's audience has
    to use their eyes as well as their ears (a novel,
    in contrast, is a 'monomedial' form).
  • A closet drama is a play that is primarily
    designed to be read. Often these plays are
    identified as 'dramatic poems'.

4
Text and Performance
  • Absolute drama type of drama that does not
    employ a level of fictional mediation a play
    that makes no use of narrator figures, chorus
    characters, story-internal stage managers, or any
    other 'epic' elements
  • Epic drama is one that makes use of 'epic
    devices' such as those listed above, mainly a
    narrator or teller figure. It is 'epic' in the
    sense that, just like in prose fiction, there is
    a visible and/or audible narrator figure whose
    presence creates a distinct level of
    communication complete with addressee, setting,
    and time line.

5
Illusionist vs. Non-illusionist Theater
  • illusionist theater type of drama that creates
    the illusion of presenting reality through
  • impersonating characters, actors identifying with
    their role
  • realistic stage settings and costumes
  • coherent sequence of actions
  • non-illusionist theater type of drama that
    breaks the illusion of presenting reality
    through
  • showing characters, creating distance between
    actor and character
  • minimalistic settings and costumes
  • alienation/defamiliarization effect
    (Verfremdungseffekt, Brecht)
  • narrator figure

6
Epic Drama
  • Narrator
  • A mediator situated on an intermediate level of
    fictional communication, typically also the
    prologue speaker or epilogue speaker, ostensibly
    telling, summarizing or commenting on the story
    that is/was enacted in the play.
  • Alienation effect
  • Bertolt Brecht's term for a wide variety of
    anti-illusionist dramatic techniques.

7
Epic Drama
  • Meta-Drama
  • a drama about drama
  • theater exposes its theatricality/construction
  • (self-referential)
  • explores the notion that life imitates art
    (drama) rather than the other way round
    (Aristotle's assumption).
  • often uses a theatrical location as a setting,
    and a rehearsal or a play-within-the-play as part
    of the action

8
Texts/Elements in Drama
  • primary text direct communication among
    characters speeches of the characters, including
    prologues and epilogues, immediate action
  • secondary text all textual elements that do not
    belong to the primary text
  • specifically, the play's title, subtitle,
    historical notes, dramatis personae, stage
    directions, speech prefixes etc.
  • multimedia elements music, sound effects,
    lighting, stage props, etc.

9
Communication in Drama
10
Communication in Drama
11
Communication in Drama
12
Sign System in Theater / Plurimediality
13
Basic Technical Terms
  • Act
  • Scene
  • Set
  • Props/Properties

14
Elements of Primary Text
  • Speech
  • Monologue / Soliloquy
  • Dialogue / Polylogue
  • Aside
  • Monological aside
  • Dialogical aside
  • Aside ad spectatores
  • Prologue, Epilogue, Report

15
Monologue and Soliloquy
  • Monologue A long speech in which a character
    talks to him- or herself.
  • Often, only one character is on stage during a
    monologue, in which case one also speaks of a
    soliloquy (from Latin solus, 'alone').

16
Example Soliloquy from Hamlet
  • To be, or not to be, that is the question
  • Whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer
  • The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
  • Or to take arms against a sea of troubles
  • And by opposing end them. To die to sleep,
  • No more and by a sleep to say we end
  • The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
  • That flesh is heir to tis a consummation
  • Devoutly to be wishd. To die, to sleep
  • To sleep, perchance to dream ay, theres the
    rub
  • For in that sleep of death what dreams may come,
  • When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
  • Must give us pause theres the respect
  • That makes calamity of so long life.
  • Thus conscience does make cowards of us all,
  • And thus the native hue of resolution
  • Is sicklied oer with the pale cast of thought,
  • And enterprises of great pitch and moment

17
Dialogue
  • Dialogue A sequence of conversational 'turns'
    exchanged between two or more speakers or
    'interlocutors'.
  • The more specific term duologue is occasionally
    used to refer to a dialogue between exactly two
    speakers.

18
Asides
  • Asides are spoken away from other characters, and
    a character either speaks aside to himself
    (monological), secretively to another character
    (dialogical) or to the audience (ad spectatores).

19
Example Asides
  • LUSSURIOSO Behold, behold, my lords!
  • The Duke my fathers murdered by a vassal
  • That owes this habit and here left disguised.
  • Enter DUCHESS and SPURIO.
  • DUCHESS My lord and husband!
  • FIRST NOBLE Reverend Majesty.
  • SECOND NOBLE I have seen these clothes often
    attending on him.
  • VINDICE aside That nobleman has been
    ithcountry, for he does not lie.
  • SUPERVACUO aside Learn of our mother, lets
    dissemble too.
  • I am glad hes vanished so I hope are you.
  • AMBITIOSO aside Ay, you may take my word fort.
  • SPURIO aside Old dad dead?
  • I, one of his cast sins, will send the fates
  • Most hearty commendations by his own son
  • Ill tug in the new stream till strength be done.
  • HIPPOLITO aside Brother, how happy is our
    vengeance!
  • VINDICE aside Why, it hits
  • Past the apprehension of indifferent wits. ...

20
Example Monological Aside
  • King. But now, my cousin Hamlet, and my son -
  • Hamlet. Aside A little more than kin, and less
    than kind.
  • King. How is it that the clouds still hang on
    you?
  • (Shakespeare, Hamlet, I.2.65)

21
Example Aside ad spectatores
  • Now, enter, at head of stairs, SIR THOMAS MORE.
  • STEWARD. That's Sir Thomas More.
  • MORE The wine please, Matthew?
  • STEWARD It's there, Sir Thomas.
  • (Bolt, A Man For All Seasons)

22
Sources/ Reference
  • Chris Baldick. Oxford Concise Dictionary of
    Literary Terms. Oxford and New York Oxford UP,
    2004
  • Manfred Pfister. Das Drama Theorie und Analyse.
    10th ed. Munich Fink, 2000.
  • Michael Meyer. English and American Literatures.
    Tübingen and Basel A. Francke, 2004.
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