Arthur Milller's Death of a Salesman

 

Drama is the creation, development, and resolution of tension in an audience. The artist (the dramatist) produces tension through the creation, development, and resolution of a conflict of forces.

Aristotle’s definition of tragedy:

  1. unity of time:
  2. unity of place:
  3. unity of action:

NB: theater: from the Greek word theatron, which means “seeing place”


English III Introduction to Drama, Tragedy, and the Greek Theater
ADD YOUR OWN NOTES TO THIS OUTLINE

1. Drama, defined:
Drama is the creation, development, and resolution of tension in an audience. The artist (the dramatist) produces tension through the creation, development, and resolution of a conflict of forces.

2. Theater, defined:

3. The artist (the dramatist) has three tools with which he may create, develop, and resolve conflict:

A. Situation:
B. Character:
C. Plot:

4. Different Kinds of conflict (not an exhaustive list):

A. Conflict of forces in two characters
B. Conflict of forces within a single character
C. Conflict between the force of a single character and the force of an institution

5. Illustration of Dramatic Structure:

6. Other significant terms of drama and dramatic structure:

A. exposition

B. foil

C. climax

D. denouement (resolution)

E. secondary plot / minor conflict

F. relief of tension Generally, how do we apply these terms?

How do we investigate theme in drama?

6. Drama also involves the distortion of norms of human experience. What does this mean?

7. Tragedy and Comedy: Two major genres, or “species,” of drama

A. Tragedy
• Tragedy concerns the fate of an individual hero, singled out from the community through circumstances beyond his control and through his own choices and actions.
• As the drama progresses, the hero’s course of action entwines with events and circumstances beyond his control.
• The hero’s final downfall is seen, paradoxically, as both chosen and inevitable.
• Character dries the plot in tragedy; the hero’s decisions and actions will change the situation.

B. Comedy
• Comedy focuses on the fortunes of a community, rather than on an individual.
• Heroes in comedy often come in pairs (lovers, for example).
• Comedy aims at showing a remaking, a broader reforming, of society.

8. Aristotle’s definition of tragedy:

NB: We need to understand what Aristotle means by the significant terms of this
definition: catharsis, pity, and terror. We also need to understand how watching
tragedy can be pleasurable.


What is “heroic capacity”?


9. Some additional terms of tragedy, and of the Greek Theater:
A. theater: from the Greek word theatron, which means “seeing place”
B. unity of time:
C. unity of place:
D. unity of action:
E. peripeteia:
F. anagnorisis:
G. prologue:
H. parados:
I. episodes:
J. odes:
K. catastrophe:
L. exodus:
M. skene:
N. machina:
O. hubris:
P. hamartia:

Facts about the Greek Theater: