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The Structure of Plays
n the previous chapters, you explored activities preparing you to inter- I pret and develop a role from a playwright’s script. You used imagina- tion, concentration, observation, sensory recall, and movement to become aware of your personal resources. You used vocal exercises to prepare your voice for creative vocal expression. Improvisation and characterization activities provided opportunities for you to explore simple character portrayal and plot development. All of these activities were preparatory techniques for acting. Now you are ready to bring a character from the written page to the stage. The Structure of Plays LESSON OBJECTIVES ◆ Understand the dramatic structure of a play. 1 ◆ Recognize several types of plays. ◆ Understand how a play is organized. Much of an actor’s time is spent working from materials written by playwrights. You have probably read plays in your language arts classes. Thus, you probably already know that a play is a story written in dia- s a class, play a short logue form to be acted out by actors before a live audience as if it were A game of charades. Use the titles of plays and musicals or real life. the names of famous actors. Other forms of literature, such as short stories and novels, are writ- ten in prose form and are not intended to be acted out. Poetry also dif- fers from plays in that poetry is arranged in lines and verses and is not written to be performed. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ These students are bringing literature to life in much the same way that Aristotle first described drama over 2,000 years ago. -
Topic: Sentence Structure Definition: Syntax, Diction, and Grammar Create
Topic: Sentence Structure Definition: Syntax, diction, and grammar create sentence style. They work together to create effective writing. Explanation: Good writing is clear and easily understood by readers. That means the following elements of writing must be used effectively: • Syntax (sentence structure) should be as concise as possible. • Diction (word choice) should be as precise as possible. • Grammar (spelling and punctuation) should be accurate. Examples of rules in style to remember • Use simple present tense consistently when describing someone's written statement. o Example: “In another article she is saying…” or “she said…” o Better: "In another article she says…" o Note on verb tense: Research papers are typically written in past tense, and papers about literature and film are written in present tense. • To maintain formal style, avoid contractions even though they are appropriate in conversation. o Example: "I've noticed that she's written a novel that many people haven't read." o Better: "I have noticed that she has written a novel that many people have not read." • To maintain formal style, avoid writing in second person (you, your). o Example: "When you read Lincoln's words, you will understand his wisdom." o Better: "Reading Lincoln's words reveals his wisdom." • Avoid qualifiers, such as, pretty, little, rather, somewhat, very, kind of. They sound uncertain and hesitant. Go easy on the use of very. o Example: "I am pretty certain that with a little effort, you can be somewhat sure of the kind of success that most people usually hope for." o Better: "With effort, she can reach the success others hope for." Page 1 of 3 • Go easy on superlatives. -
Poetic Diction, Poetic Discourse and the Poetic Register
proceedings of the British Academy, 93.21-93 Poetic Diction, Poetic Discourse and the Poetic Register R. G. G. COLEMAN Summary. A number of distinctive characteristics can be iden- tified in the language used by Latin poets. To start with the lexicon, most of the words commonly cited as instances of poetic diction - ensis; fessus, meare, de, -que. -que etc. - are demonstrably archaic, having been displaced in the prose register. Archaic too are certain grammatical forms found in poetry - e.g. auldi, gen. pl. superum, agier, conticuere - and syntactic constructions like the use of simple cases for pre- I.positional phrases and of infinitives instead of the clausal structures of classical prose. Poets in all languages exploit the linguistic resources of past as well as present, but this facility is especially prominent where, as in Latin, the genre traditions positively encouraged imitatio. Some of the syntactic character- istics are influenced wholly or partly by Greek, as are other ingredients of the poetic register. The classical quantitative metres, derived from Greek, dictated the rhythmic pattern of the Latin words. Greek loan words and especially proper names - Chaoniae, Corydon, Pyrrha, Tempe, Theseus, Zephym etc. -brought exotic tones to the aural texture, often enhanced by Greek case forms. They also brought an allusive richness to their contexts. However, the most impressive charac- teristics after the metre were not dependent on foreign intrusion: the creation of imagery, often as an essential feature of a poetic argument, and the tropes of semantic transfer - metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche - were frequently deployed through common words. In fact no words were too prosaic to appear in even the highest poetic contexts, always assuming their metricality. -
2.3 Flash-Forward: the Future Is Now
2.3 Flash-Forward: The Future is Now BY PATRICIA PISTERS 1. The Death of the Image is Behind Us Starting with the observation that “a certain idea of fate and a certain idea of the image are tied up in the apocalyptic discourse of today’s cultural climate,” Jacques Rancière investigates the possibilities of “imageness,” or the future of the image that can be an alternative to the often-heard complaint in contemporary culture that there is nothing but images, and that therefore images are devoid of content or meaning (1). This discourse is particularly strong in discussions on the fate of cinema in the digital age, where it is commonly argued that the cinematographic image has died either because image culture has become saturated with interactive images, as Peter Greenaway argues on countless occasions, or because the digital has undermined the ontological photographic power of the image but that film has a virtual afterlife as either information or art (Rodowick 143). Looking for the artistic power of the image, Rancière offers in his own way an alternative to these claims of the “death of the image.” According to him, the end of the image is long behind us. It was announced in the modernist artistic discourses that took place between Symbolism and Constructivism between the 1880s and 1920s. Rancière argues that the modernist search for a pure image is now replaced by a kind of impure image regime typical for contemporary media culture. | 1 2.3 Flash-Forward: The Future is Now Rancière’s position is free from any technological determinism when he argues that there is no “mediatic” or “mediumistic” catastrophe (such as the loss of chemical imprinting at the arrival of the digital) that marks the end of the image (18). -
Writing Steps
PREWRITING ● gather your thoughts and ideas ○ read, research, interview, experience, discuss, reflect ○ brainstorm, list, journal, freewrite, cluster ● direct your writing ○ determine your purpose (what you want your paper to do) ○ focus and direct your ideas to address your purpose ○ topic, thesis, capsule summary ● tailor your writing ○ determine your audience ○ choose vocabulary, syntax, formality, appeal, organization, approach ○ capture essence and flavor of paper ● plan your writing ○ organize your ideas into an outline or plan ○ chronological, spatial, topical, priority ○ inductive (exploratory), deductive (argumentative) DRAFTING ● get situated ○ comfortable, stimulating, no distractions ● express your ideas without worrying about mechanical details ○ let thoughts flow ○ do not struggle with words, spelling, punctuation, other details ○ do not follow urge to reread, restructure, rewrite ○ write quickly, informally ○ concentrate on main ideas and message ● stick to subject ○ avoid digression into interesting examples ○ follow outline or plan (with minor modifications) ○ use transitions to connect and show relationships between and among ideas ● write draft in one sitting ○ consistent tone, smooth continuity ● consider writing a second, independent draft ○ compare the independent drafts and pull out best parts of each ● take a break when your draft is complete REVISING ● re-envision what you have written ○ ensure your paper fulfills its purpose (what you want the paper to do) ○ consider alternative ways to more effectively, efficiently -
ELEMENTS of FICTION – NARRATOR / NARRATIVE VOICE Fundamental Literary Terms That Indentify Components of Narratives “Fiction
Dr. Hallett ELEMENTS OF FICTION – NARRATOR / NARRATIVE VOICE Fundamental Literary Terms that Indentify Components of Narratives “Fiction” is defined as any imaginative re-creation of life in prose narrative form. All fiction is a falsehood of sorts because it relates events that never actually happened to people (characters) who never existed, at least not in the manner portrayed in the stories. However, fiction writers aim at creating “legitimate untruths,” since they seek to demonstrate meaningful insights into the human condition. Therefore, fiction is “untrue” in the absolute sense, but true in the universal sense. Critical Thinking – analysis of any work of literature – requires a thorough investigation of the “who, where, when, what, why, etc.” of the work. Narrator / Narrative Voice Guiding Question: Who is telling the story? …What is the … Narrative Point of View is the perspective from which the events in the story are observed and recounted. To determine the point of view, identify who is telling the story, that is, the viewer through whose eyes the readers see the action (the narrator). Consider these aspects: A. Pronoun p-o-v: First (I, We)/Second (You)/Third Person narrator (He, She, It, They] B. Narrator’s degree of Omniscience [Full, Limited, Partial, None]* C. Narrator’s degree of Objectivity [Complete, None, Some (Editorial?), Ironic]* D. Narrator’s “Un/Reliability” * The Third Person (therefore, apparently Objective) Totally Omniscient (fly-on-the-wall) Narrator is the classic narrative point of view through which a disembodied narrative voice (not that of a participant in the events) knows everything (omniscient) recounts the events, introduces the characters, reports dialogue and thoughts, and all details. -
Creative Writing - Essential Curriculum
Creative Writing - Essential Curriculum CW11.10 – The student will demonstrate the ability to respond to a text by employing personal experience and critical analysis. • CW11.10.01 – Analyze how the patterns of organization, hierarchic structure, repetition of key ideas, syntax and word choice in a text influence understanding and reveal an author’s purpose. CW11.10.01a – Use scansion to analyze the meter of a poem. • CW11.10.02 – Analyze and evaluate how the literary elements of point of view, tone, imagery, voice, metaphor, and irony are used in texts for literary aesthetics. CW11.20 – The student will demonstrate the ability to compose in a variety of modes by developing content, employing specific forms, and selecting language appropriate for a particular audience. • CW11.20.01 – Write independently for an extended period of time. • CW11.20.02 – Produce literary writing and demonstrate an awareness of audience, purpose, and form using stages of the writing process as needed. • CW11.20.03 – Utilize effective structural elements of particular literary forms (e.g. poetry, short story, novel, drama, essay, biography, autobiography, journalistic writing, and film) to create works of literary merit. • CW11.20.04 – Use literary elements to compose poetry and fiction for literary aesthetics. CW11.20.04a – Use poetic elements to include consonance, assonance (and other forms of rhyme), meter (rhythm), simile, metaphor, hyperbole, understatement, personification, imagery, symbolism, syntax, parallelism, repetition, speaker’s voice, and irony. CW11.20.04b – Use poetic forms to include sonnet, haiku, ballad, blank verse, couplets, quatrains, sestets and at least 2 additional forms (ex – cinquains, villanelle, sestina, etc.). -
Connotation, Diction, Figurative Language, Imagery, Irony, and Theme
Tone: Connotation, Diction, Figurative Language, Imagery, Irony, and Theme What Should I Learn In This Lesson? ● I can explain the relationship of tone, connotation, and diction in a text. (RL/RI 4). ● I can choose an appropriate tone word for a passage and support it with individual diction choices. (Rl/RI4) ● I can explain the relationship between imagery and figurative language and describe its impact on the tone of a text. (Rl/RI4) ● I can explain why a situational or verbally ironic tone is present when its presence is identified for me. (RL/RI4) ● I can explain how an author uses diction choices and the tone they create to support the development of a theme category or a central idea. (RL/RI 2) What Is Tone? Tone is the general character, attitude, or feeling of a piece of art or literature. What tone does this painting have? How do you know? Tone in Our Bodies: Voice and Body Language Tone is also communicated through our voice and body language. Have you ever had an authority figure tell you to “Watch your tone”? What did he or she mean? Deliver the line “I thought you would understand,” and give the line a strong tone (or feeling). Record your line on the Flipgrid and say your tone word after your performance. If you aren’t sure which tone to use, try one of these: Bitter, Loving, Confused, Surprised View some of the performances of your colleagues. Then answer the following questions. How does voice communicate tone? Consider things like volume, pitch, and speed. -
On the Epistemology of Narrative Theory : Narratology and Other Theories of Fictional Narrative Sylvie Patron
On the Epistemology of Narrative Theory : Narratology and Other Theories of Fictional Narrative Sylvie Patron To cite this version: Sylvie Patron. On the Epistemology of Narrative Theory : Narratology and Other Theories of Fictional Narrative. Robert Kawashima, Gilles Philippe et Thelma Sowley. Phantom Sentences. Essays in Linguistics and Literature presented to Ann Banfield, Berne, Peter Lang, pp. 43-65, 2008. hal- 00698699v2 HAL Id: hal-00698699 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00698699v2 Submitted on 28 Mar 2013 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. On the Epistemology of Narrative Theory: Narratology and Other Theories of Fictional Narrative Sylvie Patron University of Paris 7-Denis Diderot (Translated by Anne Marsella) Introduction The work of Gérard Genette in the field referred to as “narratology”2 represents one of the most important contributions to narrative theory, considered as a branch of literary theory, in the second half of the twentieth century. I purposely say “one of the most important”, as there are other theoretical contributions, some of which I believe to be equally important though they are not as well known as Genette’s narratology, particularly in France.3 These lesser-known theories are rich in epis- temological reflection. -
143 the Flashforward Facility at DESY Abstract 1. Introduction
DESY 15-143 The FLASHForward Facility at DESY A. Aschikhin1, C. Behrens1, S. Bohlen1, J. Dale1, N. Delbos2, L. di Lucchio1, E. Elsen1, J.-H. Erbe1, M. Felber1, B. Foster3,4,*, L. Goldberg1, J. Grebenyuk1, J.-N. Gruse1, B. Hidding3,5, Zhanghu Hu1, S. Karstensen1, A. Knetsch3, O. Kononenko1, V. Libov1, K. Ludwig1, A. R. Maier2, A. Martinez de la Ossa3, T. Mehrling1, C. A. J. Palmer1, F. Pannek1, L. Schaper1, H. Schlarb1, B. Schmidt1, S. Schreiber1, J.-P. Schwinkendorf1, H. Steel1,6, M. Streeter1, G. Tauscher1, V. Wacker1, S. Weichert1, S. Wunderlich1, J. Zemella1, J. Osterhoff1 1 Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY), Notkestrasse 85, 22607 Hamburg, Germany 2 Center for Free-Electron Laser Science & Department of Physics, University of Hamburg, Luruper Chaussee 149, 22761 Hamburg, Germany 3 Department of Physics, University of Hamburg, Luruper Chaussee 149, 22761 Hamburg, Germany 4 also at DESY and University of Oxford, UK 5 also at University of Strathclyde, UK 6 also at University of Sydney, Australia * Corresponding author Abstract The FLASHForward project at DESY is a pioneering plasma-wakefield acceleration experiment that aims to produce, in a few centimetres of ionised hydrogen, beams with energy of order GeV that are of quality sufficient to be used in a free-electron laser. The plasma wave will be driven by high- current density electron beams from the FLASH linear accelerator and will explore both external and internal witness-beam injection techniques. The plasma is created by ionising a gas in a gas cell with a multi-TW laser system, which can also be used to provide optical diagnostics of the plasma and electron beams due to the <30 fs synchronisation between the laser and the driving electron beam. -
Theory and Interpretation of Narrative) Includes Bibliographical References and Index
Theory and In T e r p r e Tati o n o f n a r r ati v e James Phelan and Peter J. rabinowitz, series editors Postclassical Narratology Approaches and Analyses edited by JaN alber aNd MoNika FluderNik T h e O h i O S T a T e U n i v e r S i T y P r e ss / C O l U m b us Copyright © 2010 by The Ohio State University. All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Postclassical narratology : approaches and analyses / edited by Jan Alber and Monika Fludernik. p. cm. — (Theory and interpretation of narrative) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8142-5175-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8142-5175-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-13: 978-0-8142-1142-7 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8142-1142-9 (cloth : alk. paper) [etc.] 1. Narration (Rhetoric) I. Alber, Jan, 1973– II. Fludernik, Monika. III. Series: Theory and interpretation of narrative series. PN212.P67 2010 808—dc22 2010009305 This book is available in the following editions: Cloth (ISBN 978-0-8142-1142-7) Paper (ISBN 978-0-8142-5175-1) CD-ROM (ISBN 978-0-8142-9241-9) Cover design by Laurence J. Nozik Type set in Adobe Sabon Printed by Thomson-Shore, Inc. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48-1992. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Acknowledgments vii Introduction Jan alber and monika Fludernik 1 Part i. -
GMAT-Sentence-Correction.Pdf
A Treasure Trove of Tools and Techniques to Help You Conquer “GMAT Verbal” This eBook presents Chapter 2: Sentence Correction, as excerpted from the parent eBook Chili Hot GMAT: Verbal Review. Maven Publishing mavenpublishing.com © 2011 by Brandon Royal All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical — including photocopying, recording or any information storage and retrieval system — without permission in writing from the author or publisher. Published by: Maven Publishing 4520 Manilla Road, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2G 4B7 www.mavenpublishing.com Correspondence Address in Asia: GPO Box 440 Central, Hong Kong ISBN 978-1-897393-93-2 eDoc This eDoc contains Chapter 2: Sentence Correction, as excerpted from the parent eDoc Chili Hot GMAT: Verbal Review. Technical Credits: Cover design: George Foster, Fairfield, Iowa, USA Editing: Victory Crayne, Laguna Woods, California, USA GMAT® is a registered trademark of the Graduate Management Admission Council, which neither sponsors nor endorses this product. CONTENTS Topical Checklist 7 Chapter 1: The GMAT Exam 9 What’s on the GMAT Exam? w How is the GMAT Scored? w How does the CAT Work? w Exam Tactics w Attitude and Mental Outlook w Time frame for GMAT Study Chapter 2: Sentence Correction 15 Overview Official Exam Instructions for Sentence Correctionw Strategies and Approaches Review of Sentence Correction Overview w The 100-Question Quiz on Grammar, Diction, and Idioms w Review of Grammatical Terms w Diction Review