this PDF file
... producing them."6 Seven years later, in Canadian Bookman, Harcourt Farmer claimed that there were no "persons of Canadian descent, or adoption, who have written plays the subject matter of which deals with some intrinsic part of Canadian life, past or present; and whose plays are directly artistic r ...
... producing them."6 Seven years later, in Canadian Bookman, Harcourt Farmer claimed that there were no "persons of Canadian descent, or adoption, who have written plays the subject matter of which deals with some intrinsic part of Canadian life, past or present; and whose plays are directly artistic r ...
comparative - Rollins College
... The Comparative Drama Conference returns to the state where it all began 41 years ago. For the next five years Orlando, Florida and Rollins College will play host to scholars and theatre practitioners from the United States and around the world. As has been the tradition at the conference since its ...
... The Comparative Drama Conference returns to the state where it all began 41 years ago. For the next five years Orlando, Florida and Rollins College will play host to scholars and theatre practitioners from the United States and around the world. As has been the tradition at the conference since its ...
Comparative Drama Conference Program and
... The Comparative Drama Conference returns to the state where it all began 41 years ago. For the next five years Orlando, Florida and Rollins College will play host to scholars and theatre practitioners from the United States and around the world. As has been the tradition at the conference since its ...
... The Comparative Drama Conference returns to the state where it all began 41 years ago. For the next five years Orlando, Florida and Rollins College will play host to scholars and theatre practitioners from the United States and around the world. As has been the tradition at the conference since its ...
Metatheatre in Aeschylus` Oresteia
... remounting of the play was banned forever. Favorini also alludes to other examples of metatheatrical elements in The Persians and other plays that are beyond the scope of this examination. Agamemnon refers back to Homer’s Odyssey, specifically to Book III and IV (Homer, 1960). In Homer’s version, Ae ...
... remounting of the play was banned forever. Favorini also alludes to other examples of metatheatrical elements in The Persians and other plays that are beyond the scope of this examination. Agamemnon refers back to Homer’s Odyssey, specifically to Book III and IV (Homer, 1960). In Homer’s version, Ae ...
this PDF file
... Bengali drama that have been translated and transformed due to the inspiration of the stage production of drama-personnel, where many of them worked as producers and directors. Another mentionable matter is that all translations and transformations have been taken from English edition for want of co ...
... Bengali drama that have been translated and transformed due to the inspiration of the stage production of drama-personnel, where many of them worked as producers and directors. Another mentionable matter is that all translations and transformations have been taken from English edition for want of co ...
Towards a way of Reading Scenic Space in Dramatic Texts of the
... in most Easter plays (the representation of the Holy Sepulchre is nearly always assumed to be placed directly on this feature of church architecture, or nearby), or the chapel, side altars, stairs, the sacrarium etc. The most frequently mentioned place of action for most characters in rubrics of Eas ...
... in most Easter plays (the representation of the Holy Sepulchre is nearly always assumed to be placed directly on this feature of church architecture, or nearby), or the chapel, side altars, stairs, the sacrarium etc. The most frequently mentioned place of action for most characters in rubrics of Eas ...
Metatheatre in Aeschylus` Oresteia
... almost grotesque’ (ibid., p.29). Such allusions must have been jarring for the audience, probably even self-referential. However, the more important ceremonies in the play are those in Scene III when Agamemnon returns from Troy. The pageantry of his entrance and the formal homecoming provided by Cly ...
... almost grotesque’ (ibid., p.29). Such allusions must have been jarring for the audience, probably even self-referential. However, the more important ceremonies in the play are those in Scene III when Agamemnon returns from Troy. The pageantry of his entrance and the formal homecoming provided by Cly ...
Japanese Drama: Noh Play The Noh play, created in the middle of
... fundamentals of mai (dancing), monomane (miming), and yokyoku (song). Zeami insisted on perfection in these art forms. His purpose of perfecting these three theatrical forms is to achieve yugen or ultimate aesthetic expression, meaning “what lies beneath the surface.” Yugen emphasizes suggestion rat ...
... fundamentals of mai (dancing), monomane (miming), and yokyoku (song). Zeami insisted on perfection in these art forms. His purpose of perfecting these three theatrical forms is to achieve yugen or ultimate aesthetic expression, meaning “what lies beneath the surface.” Yugen emphasizes suggestion rat ...
Shakespeare_Theatre_Rome_Dead
... and responds.8 According to contemporary associations of Purgatory with purgation, the passage even foregrounds explanation of how performed tales cathartically ‘harrow’ an audience.9 Hamlet’s prime example of purgatorial cult is also a paradigm for performed action in the round. Why? The short answ ...
... and responds.8 According to contemporary associations of Purgatory with purgation, the passage even foregrounds explanation of how performed tales cathartically ‘harrow’ an audience.9 Hamlet’s prime example of purgatorial cult is also a paradigm for performed action in the round. Why? The short answ ...
Saul Programme Notes
... In 1735, the wealthy patron and man of letters Charles Jennens, an admirer of Handel’s work for many years, delivered a libretto to the composer. Handel replied politely that at first glance it looked quite satisfactory, and that in due course he would “read it with the Attention it deserves.” It is ...
... In 1735, the wealthy patron and man of letters Charles Jennens, an admirer of Handel’s work for many years, delivered a libretto to the composer. Handel replied politely that at first glance it looked quite satisfactory, and that in due course he would “read it with the Attention it deserves.” It is ...
June 2003 - Board of Studies
... and methods of working. It is an integral aspect of our society and is taught in school curricula worldwide. Drama fosters an understanding of continuity and change, and of the connections between different times and cultures. It provides opportunities to explore social, cultural, ethical and spirit ...
... and methods of working. It is an integral aspect of our society and is taught in school curricula worldwide. Drama fosters an understanding of continuity and change, and of the connections between different times and cultures. It provides opportunities to explore social, cultural, ethical and spirit ...
Drama Years 7–10 Syllabus
... and methods of working. It is an integral aspect of our society and is taught in school curricula worldwide. Drama fosters an understanding of continuity and change, and of the connections between different times and cultures. It provides opportunities to explore social, cultural, ethical and spirit ...
... and methods of working. It is an integral aspect of our society and is taught in school curricula worldwide. Drama fosters an understanding of continuity and change, and of the connections between different times and cultures. It provides opportunities to explore social, cultural, ethical and spirit ...
VCE Theatre Studies Resources 2014-2018
... VCE Theatre Studies Resources 2014–2018 Some of the print resources contained in this list may be out of print. They have been included because they may still be available from libraries, bookshops and private collections. At the time of publication the URLs (website addresses) cited were checked fo ...
... VCE Theatre Studies Resources 2014–2018 Some of the print resources contained in this list may be out of print. They have been included because they may still be available from libraries, bookshops and private collections. At the time of publication the URLs (website addresses) cited were checked fo ...
05_Juan Cerda - Facultatea de Litere
... On the one hand, symbolic potential is assimilated from classical drama in early works, like Titus Andronicus, which ‘depicts several Ovidian myths in the action – the world’s four ages, and the story of Tereus, Philomel, and Procne’ (Miola 2000: 19). This investment in the symbolic can also be rela ...
... On the one hand, symbolic potential is assimilated from classical drama in early works, like Titus Andronicus, which ‘depicts several Ovidian myths in the action – the world’s four ages, and the story of Tereus, Philomel, and Procne’ (Miola 2000: 19). This investment in the symbolic can also be rela ...
ENG 362 English Drama
... The idea of degree and order is a basic assumption that God created the universe and assigned a position to everything in it, according to his will. This feeling is grafted from the medieval assumption of ordered chain of being, which implies a hierarchical existence. This belief assumes that God is ...
... The idea of degree and order is a basic assumption that God created the universe and assigned a position to everything in it, according to his will. This feeling is grafted from the medieval assumption of ordered chain of being, which implies a hierarchical existence. This belief assumes that God is ...
View/Open - Univerzita Pardubice
... to Cornish and Ketels, in the 1950’s “Censorship still prohibited from the stage such ordinary English words as impotent, syphilis, abortion and miscarriage, not to mention queer and fairy.” (1985, ix) Obviously, not only these words but the whole plays dealing with controversial topics of a similar ...
... to Cornish and Ketels, in the 1950’s “Censorship still prohibited from the stage such ordinary English words as impotent, syphilis, abortion and miscarriage, not to mention queer and fairy.” (1985, ix) Obviously, not only these words but the whole plays dealing with controversial topics of a similar ...
Roman Comedy II
... it turns out, speak volumes about the artist and his age. Also, because there is no known precedent for these prologues, they may even have been a feature of playwriting Terence himself invented. If so, it is one of the few aspects of drama the Romans may claim as their own, and claim proudly. As su ...
... it turns out, speak volumes about the artist and his age. Also, because there is no known precedent for these prologues, they may even have been a feature of playwriting Terence himself invented. If so, it is one of the few aspects of drama the Romans may claim as their own, and claim proudly. As su ...
this PDF file - European Scientific Journal
... the dominant voice in Suicide Syndrome is that of an ideologue-artist who manoeuvres character and actions, songs and dance to amplify class sympathy (2000:192). The play starts as a group of people marches into the theatre where a play is about to end, with irascible countenances demanding a more r ...
... the dominant voice in Suicide Syndrome is that of an ideologue-artist who manoeuvres character and actions, songs and dance to amplify class sympathy (2000:192). The play starts as a group of people marches into the theatre where a play is about to end, with irascible countenances demanding a more r ...
edward albee
... Throughout the following years, Albee strengthened his reputation with a series of one-act plays, including The Death of Bessie Smith and The Sandbox, which he dedicated to his beloved grandmother, in 1960. Followed by a low period. Critics described his plays based on books as being static represe ...
... Throughout the following years, Albee strengthened his reputation with a series of one-act plays, including The Death of Bessie Smith and The Sandbox, which he dedicated to his beloved grandmother, in 1960. Followed by a low period. Critics described his plays based on books as being static represe ...
Introduction_to_Othello - HHS-English-IV
... character, alone on stage, expresses his or her thoughts aloud. Conflict: 1. External: dispute between the protagonist and another character or nature 2. Internal: occurs when the protagonist struggles within himself or herself ...
... character, alone on stage, expresses his or her thoughts aloud. Conflict: 1. External: dispute between the protagonist and another character or nature 2. Internal: occurs when the protagonist struggles within himself or herself ...
Jan 12
... • No one is sure how Shakespeare supported his new family, but according to tradition, he taught school for a few years. • His two daughters grew up and married, but the boy died when he was just eleven. • It is speculated that Shakespeare became interested in theater by seeing the regular performan ...
... • No one is sure how Shakespeare supported his new family, but according to tradition, he taught school for a few years. • His two daughters grew up and married, but the boy died when he was just eleven. • It is speculated that Shakespeare became interested in theater by seeing the regular performan ...
divinity>tomorrow drama>tomorrow - Giving to Yale
... students bring innovation, passion, and skill to Yale’s intellectual life. And in making their own art, students in Yale College add an essential dimension to an education that is among the world’s best. Yale drama is itself a national resource. The School of Drama is the largest and most comprehens ...
... students bring innovation, passion, and skill to Yale’s intellectual life. And in making their own art, students in Yale College add an essential dimension to an education that is among the world’s best. Yale drama is itself a national resource. The School of Drama is the largest and most comprehens ...
Rev. of The Beaux` Stratagem.
... the Stratford Festival production of George Farquhar’s The Beaux’ Stratagem. Photography by Don Dixon. Digital Artist: Krista Dodson. ...
... the Stratford Festival production of George Farquhar’s The Beaux’ Stratagem. Photography by Don Dixon. Digital Artist: Krista Dodson. ...
Introducing Sam Shepard - The Indian Review of World Literature in
... After the civil war, drama in the United States of America was always incapable of keeping pace with the progress in other branches of literature, because of the crude realities of war and the swift development of industry. Later the puritan prejudice against theatre had completely vanished and grea ...
... After the civil war, drama in the United States of America was always incapable of keeping pace with the progress in other branches of literature, because of the crude realities of war and the swift development of industry. Later the puritan prejudice against theatre had completely vanished and grea ...
Liturgical drama
Liturgical drama or religious drama, in its various Christian contexts, originates from the Mass itself, and usually presents a relatively complex ritual that includes theatrical elements. Until the Late Middle Ages it is the best recorded tradition of religious drama, and is assumed to have been the root from which other forms such as the civic mystery plays, as well as poorly recorded travelling companies, grew. The number of surviving scripts is small, and many performances are only known about from entries in payment records and the like.The medieval drama originated in religion. The Church forbade the faithful during the early centuries to attend the licentious representations of decadent paganism, but once this ""immoral"" theatre disappeared, the Church allowed, and contributed to, gradual development of a new drama that was not only moral, but edifying and pious. On certain solemn feasts, such as Easter and Christmas the Office was interrupted, and the priests represented, in the presence of those assisting, the religious event being celebrated. At first the text of this liturgical drama was very brief, such as the interchange of the ""Quem Quaeritis?"" between the angel and the three Maries that was introduced into the Easter liturgy in the tenth century, as a new genre of liturgical ceremony. Dramatic texts were at first taken solely from the Gospel or the Office of the day. It was in prose and in Latin. But by degrees versification crept in. The earliest of such dramatic ""tropes"" of the Easter service are from England and date from the tenth century. Soon verse pervaded the entire drama, prose became the exception, and the vernacular appeared beside Latin. Thus, in the twelfth-century French drama of the ""Wise Virgins,"" women keep their virginity by eating blue rocks that make them immune to men. It does little more than depict the Gospel parable of the wise and foolish virgins. The chorus employs Latin, while Christ and the virgins use both Latin and French, and the angel speaks only French. When the vernacular completely supplanted the Latin, and individual inventiveness asserted itself, the drama left the precincts of the Church and ceased to be liturgical, but kept its religious character. This evolution seems to have been accomplished in the twelfth century. With the appearance of the vernacular a development of the drama along national lines became possible.