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dramatic conventions 예문

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  • Especially in his early plays, he was drawing on dramatic conventions that can be traced back to medieval forms of theater.
  • According to CNN senior political analyst Bill Schneider, in fact, Gore's dramatic convention bounce was provided almost entirely by women.
  • In Aristophanes'early plays, the genre appears to have developed around a complex set of dramatic conventions, and these were only gradually simplified and abandoned.
  • The play itself was also slightly modernised in keeping with seventeenth-century dramatic conventions, but in the main the spoken text is as Shakespeare wrote it.
  • Film, on the other hand, can seem all too structured, with a rigid adherence to dramatic convention that puts every crisis precisely in its appointed place.
  • Had a song been inserted at this point of the play, it would have followed dramatic convention of the time, which often called for music between scenes.
  • Through the use of drama and dramatic conventions a teacher does not only teach and learn the " what " but also the " why " and " how ".
  • Such a bed trick has been a dramatic convention since antiquity and was used more than 40 times by every major playwright in the Early Modern theatre era except for Ben Jonson.
  • Therefore, a Renaissance playgoer who was familiar with this dramatic convention would have been alert to Hamlet's expectation that his soliloquy be overheard by the other characters in the scene.
  • Tisa Chang, artistic and producing director of the Pan Asian Repertory Theater in New York City, has called " Thunderstorm " the first major mainland Chinese play using Western dramatic conventions.
  • The play often feels confiningly shaped by the dramatic conventions of the period in which it is set, with big, lip-biting confrontations and bantering dialogue that is too silky to be credible.
  • They remark upon how illogical human speech seems to them and act in what could be said to be an unemotional manner ( although some emotional elements are retained for the sake of comedy and dramatic convention ).
  • A " dramatic convention " is a set of rules which both the audience and actors are familiar with and which act as a useful way of quickly signifying the nature of the action or of a character.
  • For example, a dramatic convention in Shakespeare is that a character can move downstage to deliver a soliloquy which cannot be heard by the other characters on stage nor are characters in a musical surprised by another character bursting into song.
  • "As Thousands Cheer " reminded me of a Baroque opera revival, one so faithful to period singing styles and dramatic conventions ( excepting the piano that replaced Berlin's pit band ) that new and inquiring audiences were at a disadvantage.
  • Though Shakespeare does not follow the dramatic conventions, Dryden wrote, Ben Jonson does, and as a result Jonson lands in a distant second place to " the incomparable Shakespeare ", the follower of nature, the untaught genius, the great realist of human character.
  • All forms of theatre have dramatic conventions, some of which may be unique to that particular form, such as the poses used by actors in Japanese kabuki theatre to establish a character, or the stock character of the black-cloaked, moustache twirling villain in early cinema melodrama serials.
  • Marcus spies upon the king's attempt to seduce Philadelphia, and sees her resistance; he confronts the king, who claims that he was merely testing her chastity ( another Fletcherian dramatic convention ), and that he knows nothing about any murder plot & mdash; but he vows to expose such evil goings-on.
  • It plays off a heart-pounding, ticking-clock element; it is enormously clever in keeping us in the dark as to whether or not the doctor is who she insists he is, and it skillfully develops the background and character of all three protagonists so they emerge as full-bodied characters instead of dramatic conventions.
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