DEFITION of DRAMA
Drama is work of literature or
composition Which delianates life and human activity by means of presenting
various actions of-and dialogues between- a group of characters. (Reaske,
1966:5)
Drama is futhermore designed for
theatrical presentation. We must never forget that drama is designed to be
acted on the stage.
Everyone agrees that entertainment
is nevertheless one of the ostensible objectives of drama.
GREEK TRAGEDY 1
1.
1. Aristotele in
his book, poetics, thought that a tragedy dramatically imitated an action of
high importance
2.
2. Usually there
was to be acentral character with some particular tragic flaw (hamartia). That
s a character is led into death,despair, of misery trough some sort of error,
either in him self on in his action; the most cited flaw is hubris, which means
excessive self-destructive pride.
3.
3. The basic
nidea behid Greek tragedy is that man learns through suffering.
4.
4. The experience
of suffering often leads into new and enlarged awareness of both self and
existence.
5.
5. Aristotle
futher explained that tragedy should have a catharsis or purging effects, the
audienceshould be purged of both pity and fear by the time te tragedy comes to
an end.
6.
6. By suffering
vicariously with the tragic hero,audience has a greather moral awareness and
keener self-knowledge.
CHARACTERS
Characters are fictions creations
and thus the dramatist and the novelist my both be judget with the regard to
their ability in the art of characterization.
In a drama, there is no narration
or description: instead all characterization must be presented through dialogue:
characters speaks about each other and characters speaks about themselves-
particulary of- course about their central emotion, such as love and hate.
MOTIVATION
Most playes have central motives
and in general these are giant human emoticons which motivate most people in
real life; a fw of the most common are:
1.
1. Hope for
reward
2.
2. Love
3.
3. Fear of
failure
4.
4. Religious
feelings
5.
5. Revenge
6.
6. Greed
7.
7. Jealously
DRAMATIC CONVENTION
Because a play is only – and
can only be – an “imitation” or representation of an action, an attempted
facsimile of real life, the audience or reader, must be willing to accept
certain things in the imagination.
1. The playgoer
must meet the playwright halfway and accept the passing of time. Just as he
must accept the ease with which the location of the play may switch in a
matter of seconds from one place to another.
2. The audience
must also accept the fact that when one character “whispers” to another, it
must be aloud enough for everyone in the theatre to hear..
3. It should
also be noted that so-called “asides” which the other characters are not
supposed to hear, are obviously delivered in loud enough voices for them to
hear.
Definition of Drama
Drama is work of literature or composition Which delianates life and human activity by means of presenting various actions of-and dialogues between- a group of characters. (Reaske, 1966:5)
Drama is futhermore designed for theatrical presentation. We must never forget that drama is designed to be acted on the stage.
Everyone agrees that entertainment is nevertheless one of the ostensible objectives of drama
Drama is work of literature or composition Which delianates life and human activity by means of presenting various actions of-and dialogues between- a group of characters. (Reaske, 1966:5)
Drama is futhermore designed for theatrical presentation. We must never forget that drama is designed to be acted on the stage.
Everyone agrees that entertainment is nevertheless one of the ostensible objectives of drama
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