Theatre chapter 6 & 7
structural conventions
1) limited space 2) limited time 3) strongly opposed forces 4) Balance of forces
episodic vs climactic Climactic form
Climactic: 1) plot begins late in the story, toward the very end or climax. 2) Covers a short space of time, perhaps a few hours or at most a few days. 3) contains a few solid, extended scenes, such as three acts with each act comprising one long scene. 4) Occurs in a restricted locale, such as one room or one house 5) number of characters is severely limited- usually no more than six or eight 6) plot is linear and moves in a single line with a few sub-plots or counter plots 7) line of action proceeds in a cause-and-effect chain. 8) the characters and events are closely linked in a sequence of logical, almost inevitable development.
episodic vs climactic Episodic form
Episodic: 1) plot begins relatively early in the story and moves through a series of episodes. 2) covers a longer period of time (weeks, months, and sometimes many years) 3) has many short, fragmented scenes; sometimes an alternation of short and long scenes. 4) may range over and entire city or even several countries. 5) has a profusion of characters, sometimes several dozen. 6) is frequently marked by several threads of action, such as two parallel plots, or scenes of comic relief in a serious play. 7) scenes are juxtaposed to one another. An event may result from several causes; or it may have no apparent cause, but arises in a network or a web of circumstances.
crisis
a point in a play when events and opposing forces are at a crucial moment, and when the course of further action will be determined.
complication
introduction, in a play, of a new force, which creates a new balance of power and entails a delay in reaching the climax.
story
narrative accounts of what people do
strongly opposed forces
one character directly opposed another, they are bound to clash.
creating structure
plot story exposition inciting incident complication crisis climax
incentive and motivation
reasons and need to tell the story
inciting incident
something occurs, obstacles: that which delays/ prevents the achieving of a goal by a character. obstacles creates complication and conflict.
Balance of forces
something or someone that balanced the opposition.
Subject and verb of drama
subject: people action: challenges for the characters
Limited space
the action of the play is generally confined to a "world " if it's own, a fictional universe where all the characters or actions move outside of the world.
limited time
the actual playing time of the performance is the time limit or deadline within the play.
plot
the arrangement of events or the selection and order of scenes in a play
exposition
the background information. status of the world.
climax
the issue of the play is resolved either happy or unhappy