How to Read and Write about DramaArco, 1988 - 181 sider Designed to provide students with a complete guide to the interpretation of dramatic literature, this concise handbook discusses Western and Eastern theatrical traditions as well as traditional and contemporary works in terms of textual analysis and stage presentation. |
Indhold
INTRODUCTION 1988 | 1 |
Perspectives of the Drama 5 Spectator Sportsmanship and the Classical | 8 |
Restoration Drama 14 Eighteenth and NineteenthCentury Drama | 15 |
Copyright | |
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
actors Albee's allows alternative American audience Bald Soprano Brecht Brechtian CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ century character dialogue character types characterized Chekhov's Chorus classical clues comedy comic confrontation contemporary contrast Copyright costume CRUZ The University dance David Rabe Edmund Elizabethan embellished emotional enhance Euripides's Everyman example feminist feminist aesthetic final Hedda Gabler Ibsen imagination incorporates Ionesco language Lear literary lyric medieval drama Midsummer Night's Dream Millamant Mirabell mirror mise-en-scène modern musical O'Neill O'Neill's Oedipus Othello performance physical Pinter play play's playreader playwright poetic popular production ingredients prose protagonist psychological realistic reflect relationship Reprinted by permission reveal ritual Sam Shepard scene script Shakespeare's Shepard's Silence sound effects spectator stage action stage characters Stage Conventions Streetcar Named Desire style subplots suggest symbolic Tesman theatre theatrical tradition tragedy tragic Tyrone University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA verbal verse versus visual Waiting for Godot Western Wilder's women words York Zoo Story
Henvisninger til denne bog
Private Readings/public Texts: Playreaders' Constructs of Theatre Audiences Kenneth Krauss Begrænset visning - 1993 |