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Activator: Acrostic INSTRUCTIONS: Write the name “Shakespeare” on your plate. Next, write information you learned during your Web Quest using the letters.

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Presentation on theme: "Activator: Acrostic INSTRUCTIONS: Write the name “Shakespeare” on your plate. Next, write information you learned during your Web Quest using the letters."— Presentation transcript:

1 Activator: Acrostic INSTRUCTIONS: Write the name “Shakespeare” on your plate. Next, write information you learned during your Web Quest using the letters in Shakespeare. You have 5 minutes to complete this task.

2 Emphasis on Shakespearean Drama
Introduction to Drama Emphasis on Shakespearean Drama

3 Part One Elements of drama

4 Drama The word drama comes from the Greek verb dran, which means “to do.” The earliest known plays. . . Were written around the fifth century B.C. Produced for festivals to honor Dionysus, the god of wine and fertility.

5 Dramatic Structure Like the plot of a story, the plot of a play involves characters who face a problem or conflict. Climax: point of highest tension; action determines how the conflict will be resolved Rising action: tension builds Falling action: tension subsides Exposition: characters, setting and conflict are introduced Resolution conflict is resolved; play ends

6 Elements of Drama Playwright-the author of a play
Actors-the people who perform Acts-the units of action Scenes-parts of the acts

7 Characters’ Speech The characters’ speech may take any of the following forms. Dialogue- conversations of characters on stage Monologue- long speech given by one character to the others Soliloquy- speech by a character alone onstage to himself, herself, or to the audience Asides- remarks made to the audience or to one character: the other characters onstage do not hear an aside

8 Stage Directions Found in brackets [ ]
Describe scenery and how characters speak C, Center Stage L, Stage Left R, Stage Right U, Upstage or Rear D, Downstage or Front

9 Part Two Types of Plays

10 Two Types of Plays Tragedies Comedies

11 Tragedy A tragedy is a play that ends unhappily. It shows the downfall of the main character. Most classic Greek tragedies deal with serious, universal themes such as . . . Tragedies put human limitations against the larger forces of destiny. right and wrong justice and injustice life and death

12 Tragic Hero The protagonist of most classical tragedies is a tragic hero. The tragic hero is noble and in many ways likable. However, he has a tragic flaw, which is a personality flaw or a mistake he makes. pride rebelliousness jealousy

13 Comedy A comedy is a play that ends happily. The plot usually centers on a romantic conflict. boy meets girl boy loses girl boy wins girl

14 Comedy Comic complications always occur before the conflict is resolved. In most cases, the play ends with a wedding.

15 Part Three Devices in Drama

16 Dramatic Irony Dramatic Irony: the audience or the reader knows something that a character does not. Playwrights use dramatic irony when they allow the audience to know more than the characters do about a specific situation or incident.

17 Foil A foil is a character who provides a contrast to another character, usually the protagonist. The function of a foil is to highlight the protagonist’s qualities and personality. Therefore, a foil is a method of characterization for a playwright.

18 Language of Shakespeare’s Plays
Part Four Language of Shakespeare’s Plays

19 Shakespeare’s Language
Meter is a rhythm of accented and unaccented syllables which are organized into patterns, called feet. Using the same meter throughout a play helped actors memorize their lines. Shakespeare used iambic pentameter as his meter.

20 Iambic Pentameter Iambic foot = a pair of syllables containing short/long or unstressed/stressed syllables. Pentameter = five So Iambic pentameter is a line that contains five iambs (10 syllables in unstressed stressed pattern) Makes a sound like a heartbeat: deDUM deDUM deDUM deDUM deDUM

21 Iambic Pentameter Examples
When I do count the clock that tells the time To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shells


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