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Introduction to English Literatures
Drama- Lecture 9
What is Drama?Drama is literature that is primarily written for theatrical performance.
A dramatic text consists of two components: (1) It is literature to begin with (2) but it is incomplete without the performative aspect. Every dramatic text contains of instructions, known as secondary text, for performance.Multi-medial (audio, visual, textual)Theatre Studies/Literary Studies (performance criticism)
History of Drama Greek Drama: 500-400 B.C.
(tragedy, comedy, amphitheatres, annual competitions) Medieval: The Middle Ages 1200-1500 AD (Liturgical, morality; example: The Castle of Perseverance) Elizabethan & Jacobean:1500-1642 (Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson ) Restoration & 18th Cent. Drama :1660-1800
(John Brute’s The Provoked Wife ) Romantic Era:1800-1880
(Keats, Byron, Shelly) Modern Era :1880-Present
(absurd, regular drama, Beckett, Pinter)
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: a major division of an act Stage Directions: a dramatist’s instructions
for performing a play (secondary text)
Waiting for Godot(Italics: secondary text, non-italics: primary text)
ACT IA country road. A tree.
Evening.
Estragon, sitting on a low mound, is trying to take off his boot. He pulls at it with both hands, panting.
He gives up, exhausted, rests, tries again. As before. Enter Vladimir. ESTRAGON: (giving up again). Nothing to be done. VLADIMIR: (advancing with short, stiff strides, legs wide apart). I'm beginning
to come round to that opinion. All my life I've tried to put it from me, saying Vladimir, be reasonable, you haven't yet tried everything. And I resumed the struggle. (He broods, musing on the struggle. Turning to Estragon.) So there you are again.
ESTRAGON: Am I? VLADIMIR: I'm glad to see you back. I thought you were gone forever.
Communication External
at the level of author and recipient, production and audience
Internal/Intertextualat the level of characters, text.characters move between the roles of the addresser and addressee
Key Components of Internal Communication
Dialogue MonologueSoliloquyAside
(there is no narrator in drama)
Communication - Between the Characters and Stage
Historical Author/ Recipient (reader and theatre apparatus)
(addresser)
- Between the Cast and the AudienceTheatre apparatus and audience
(addresser)
Epic Theatre . Stage Manager.
Inside the Action . Outside the Action
Shaffer’s Amadeus (clip) . Wilder’s Our Town
Verbal . Non Verbal . Alienation Effect
Types of Drama Comedy
(Shakespeare's All's Well That Ends Well) Tragedy
(Shakespeare's Othello) Romantic Comedy (boy gets the girl, loses
her, and gets her again: Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night’s Dream)
Satiric Comedy (critique of society, wit, Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest)
Farce (verbal humor, mixed plot, subversion, eg. Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew)
Absurd (meaningless of existence, Beckett’s Endgame, Pinter’s The Homecoming)
Semiotics of Theatre
Codes
Acoustic/VisualStage Set (Durative) – do not ChangeGestures and Facial Expressions (Non-Durative)
–Change
(Transparency)
Information and Verbal Communication‘Dramatic introduction’ (phatic)(Waiting for Godot)
‘Exposition’ (referential- drama text, context) (clip – The Tempest)
Can occur concurrently
Isolated/Initial (separate from the action proper)(examples Brecht’s Caucasian Chalk Circle)
Integrated (part of the action proper)(clip Richard III)
Analytical Drama – genre – Analysis of exposition is present throughout
Monologue and Soliloquy
Soliloquy – Character speaks to himself/herself in his or her lonely presence
Monologue – Character speaks to himself/herself addressing others/ in the presence of others
Obvious of artificiality, realistic dramas avoid them.
They can also serve as ‘exposition’ and ‘introduction’ of the drama.