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Drama Intro.

Drama is a type of literature meant to be performed for an audience. It has a long history dating back to ancient Greek drama and includes many genres like tragedy, comedy, and satire. Key elements of drama include conflicts, characters like the protagonist and antagonist, and conventions for performance such as acts, scenes, and stage directions.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views16 pages

Drama Intro.

Drama is a type of literature meant to be performed for an audience. It has a long history dating back to ancient Greek drama and includes many genres like tragedy, comedy, and satire. Key elements of drama include conflicts, characters like the protagonist and antagonist, and conventions for performance such as acts, scenes, and stage directions.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Drama

What is Drama?

Drama is a type of literature that is primarily written to be performed for an audience. When reading a play, it is important to keep certain features of drama in mind. Some of these features relate to drama as literature; others reflect its character as a performance.

History
Greek Drama 500-400 B.C. Medieval: The Middle Ages 1200-1500 AD Elizabethan & Jacobean 1500-1642 Restoration & 18th Cent. Drama 1660-1800 Romantic Era 1800-1880 Modern Era 1850-Present

Types of Drama- Tragedy


Tragedy: A play in which the main character experiences disaster, but faces this downfall in such a way as to attain heroic stature.* Even though Tragedies are gloomy they are triumphant, because they inspire exaltation at the greatness human beings can attain even in defeat.

Comedy closes with a peaceful resolution of the main conflict.*


High

Comedy

Comedy: The humor arises from subtle characterization, social satire, and sophisticated wit. Low Comedy: Emphasizes absurd dialogue, bawdy jokes, visual gags, and physical humor.*

Types of Comedy
Romantic Comedy: The main characters are lovers, and the plot tends to follow the pattern of boy gets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl again. Satiric Comedy: Uses humor to ridicule foolish ideas or customs with the purpose of improving society.

Comedy

of Manners: Satirizes the vices and follies of the upper class.*

Additional Forms of Drama


Farce: Relies on exaggeration, absurdity, and slapstick Straight Drama or Drama: Deal with serious subjects, but do not always end in disaster.

Elements of Drama
External Conflict: Pits a character against nature or fate, society, or another character Internal conflict: Between opposing forces within a character. Protagonist: The central character of the play and often undergoes radical changes as the action progresses.* Antagonist: The character who opposes the main character*

Foil: A minor character whose traits contrast sharply with those of the protagonist Dialogue: Conversations between characters Monologue: A long speech spoken by a single character to himself or herself, or to the audience Soliloquy: A monologue in which a character speaks his or her private thoughts aloud and appears to be unaware of the audience.

Aside: a short speech or comment delivered by a character to the audience, but unheard by the other characters who are present.

Conventions of Drama
Cast of Characters: listed in the beginning of the play, before the action starts. Act: a major division of a play Scenes: Major division of an act Stage Directions: a dramatists instructions for performing a play.

Protagonist

Antagonist

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