Analytical Sourcebook of Concepts in Dramatic TheoryBloomsbury Academic, 21/08/1981 - 560 من الصفحات Product information not available. |
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الصفحة 138
... audience . The word play carries with it the idea of an audience . We cannot conceive of a play without an audience . Take one after the other the accessories which serve in the performance of a dramatic work - they can all be replaced ...
... audience . The word play carries with it the idea of an audience . We cannot conceive of a play without an audience . Take one after the other the accessories which serve in the performance of a dramatic work - they can all be replaced ...
الصفحة 150
... audience in an action , Makes the audience an observer , but uses up its activity . assures its activity . Helps it to feel . Communicates experiences . Compels it to make decisions . Communicates insights . The audience is projected ...
... audience in an action , Makes the audience an observer , but uses up its activity . assures its activity . Helps it to feel . Communicates experiences . Compels it to make decisions . Communicates insights . The audience is projected ...
الصفحة 206
... audience ? Do you imagine he will feel any more than what you have given him ? If you think of the audience , he will think of them , too . You seek their applause ; so will he . And then what will become of your illusion ? ... The ...
... audience ? Do you imagine he will feel any more than what you have given him ? If you think of the audience , he will think of them , too . You seek their applause ; so will he . And then what will become of your illusion ? ... The ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
1570 Castelvetro 1660 Corneille 1808 Schlegel SCL 1871 Nietzsche 4th cent action actor Addison AW AESTHETIC AFFECT Artaud artistic audience B.C. Aristotle AP BBBG beautiful Brecht CATHARSIS character Chekhov CLOSURE CLSW comedy comic CONFLICT Corneille critic d'Aubignac delight Diderot drama Dryden DW Eliot emotions Epic poetry EPIC THEATRE Euripides expression fear feeling GENRE DEFINITION GEST Goethe Hazlitt HW Hegel HERO human HUMOR idea IDEALISM ILLUSION imagination IMITATION individual INSTRUCTION Johnson language MAGNITUDE means METAPHOR mind Molière moral nature object Oscar Levy passions pathos persons Pirandello pity play pleasure PLOT poem poet POETIC JUSTICE poetry PROBABILITY REALISM reality representation represented RULES Scaliger scene Schlegel sense Shakespeare Shaw SPECTACLE spectator stage Stanislavski STYLE SUBJECT SYMBOL taste things THOUGHT THREE UNITIES tion tragedy tragic true truth VAWP Voltaire whole words