Answers Diniejko 22 40


22. Features of tragedy. Tragic vision

Tragedy

Aristotle's definition

Tragedy

Ancient & Elizabethan Tragedy

Tragism

Catharsis

Hamartia

Hubris

For example, King Lear's hubris is what ultimately strips him of his power.

Tragic end

Pity & fear

Tragic Visio

23. Features of comedy, farce, tragicomedy, modern tragicomedy (theatre of absurd).

Comedy

Comic characters & situations

Komos

Comedy

Caricature

Characters' behaviour

The behaviour of the characters presented in comedy is ludicrous and sometimes absurd and the result in the audience is one of correction of behaviours. 

Lack of plausibility

The purpose of comedy

Farce is a type of comedy that relies entirely on highly improbable actions and situations which involve ridiculous complications without regard for human values

The farce presents highly exaggerated and caricatured types of characters and often has an unlikely plot.

Farces employ sexual mix-ups, verbal humour and physical comedy

Tragicomedy

Modern tragicomedy. In the 20th century, many theorists do not make a sharp distinction

between the comic and the tragic. Modern tragicomedy and the Theatre of the Absurd have blurred the

traditional distinction between the two dramatic genres. Tragicomic elements can be seen in modern

drama, in the plays of Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco, Harold Pinter, Slawomir Mrozek.

Theatre of the Absurd: a type of theatre which presents characters cut off from religious and social

roots and who live in meaningless isolation in an alien (absurd) universe.

24. Flashback, foreshadowing

Flashback: (a term derived from the language of cinema): it refers to an episode in narrative fiction that happened earlier in the story.

Foreshadowing: a suggestion of what is going to happen in the story

Foreshadowing is the technique of giving the reader a hint of what is to come sometime

later in the story, while flashback is an interruption in the action of a story to show an episode that

happened at an earlier time. A flashback provides background information necessary to an understanding

of the characters or the plot.

25. Physical & psychological plot

physical plot and a psychological plot. The latter is an invisible chain of “mental” events or thoughts occurring in the mind

of the protagonist. For example, the psychological plot in Hamlet concerns the thoughts of Prince Hamlet.

Frequently, the physical and psychological plots are interwoven in a play.

26. Protagonist and antagonist (in tragedy)

Antagonist: a character who opposes the main hero or protagonist.

The protagonist is often the main character (the central or main figure) of a story

The principal opponent of the protagonist is a character known as the antagonist, who represents or creates obstacles that the protagonist(s) must overcome

27. Symbol and symbolism.

Symbol

Symbolism may be understood as representation of reality by symbols or a system of symbols or

symbolic meaning in a literary text

It is not easy to define a symbol. Poetry makes an extensive use of symbols, but they can also be

found in drama and prose fiction. A symbol may be an object or image that stands for something else.

Many symbols are deeply rooted in cultural heritage, e.g. the cross is the symbol of Christianity; birds

may mean flight, freedom; rose means beauty, delicacy, fragility, shortness of life; rain may signify

fertility; night may symbolise death or evil. Some symbols are created by authors and it is difficult to

understand their meaning and significance unless we have studied critical analyses

28. Catharsis, comic relief (in tragedy), tragic relief (in comedy), dramatic irony, deux ex machina.

Catharsis: a tragedy performed in the theatre was believed by Aristotle to produce an emotionally

therapeutic effect in the audience: the purgation of pity and fear

Tragic relief: a tragic or near-tragic episode in a Comedy

Deux ex machina

Deus ex machina: a Latin phrase meaning `god from the machine', referring to the practice in ancient

theatre of lowering a deity onto the stage to resolve a crisis in the plot. The phrase is now applied to any improbable event, chance or coincidence used by a dramatist to rescue characters from an impossible situation.

Dramatic irony: dramatic irony occurs when the audience knows something that a character has not

realised.

29. Novel, types of novels, short story, fable, tale, fairy tale

Novel: a long story written in prose dealing with invented people (characters) and events.

Adventure novel focuses on exciting events

Autobiographical novel is based partly or wholly on the author's life experience

Christian novel reflects Christian faith and often contains a plot that revolves around the

Christian life, evangelism or conversion. The plot may be directly religious, allegorical or symbolic.

Detective novel describes a mystery, often involving a murder, which is solved by a professional

or amateur detective. A good detective novel displays excellent logic of reasoning in unravelling the

mystery or crime.

Epistolary novel is written in the form of letters

Ethnic or multicultural novel is written by a member of or about an ethnic minority group

Fantasy novel is written in an unrealistic manner, describing a non-existent world, such as that

on another planet, in the far future or in a fairyland.

Gothic novel was the product of a superficial interest in the Middle Ages. Gothic elements

included the supernatural, the weird and the mysterious.

Historical novel is set in the past, i.e. its plot refers to historical events.

Pastoral novel shows the pleasures of the simple rural life and disgust with urban stresses.

Panoramic novel has a loose plot and does not have main characters as a rule. Characters are

types rather than individuals.

Realist novel is one of the most popular subgenres of the novel. Realism is a vague term and so

is the idea of reality.

Romantic novel aims to arouse emotions rather than reflect reality

Social novel (social problem novel, social concern novel) studies the effect of economic and

social conditions upon human behaviour during a given period of time

Novel of apprenticeship (Bildungsroman) deals with upbringing and education.

Sentimental novel is a type of the novel that excessively emphasises emotion

Novel of manners is a form of a realistic novel which deals with aspects of behaviour, language,

customs and values characteristic of a particular class of people in a specific historical context.

Utopian novel presents a perfect society where the problems of poverty, crime etc. have been

eliminated.

Dystopian novel is an anti-utopian novel, where unlike the utopian novel, the attempt to create a

perfect society has gone wrong.

The term short story usually refers to short fiction written since the mid 19th century. A short

story differs from the novel by the fact that it is much shorter in length. A short story introduces a limited number of characters. As a rule, it has one central character and very few others. Exposition and the details of setting are minimised. Frequently, a short story is limited to a single episode and the denouement is sometimes described in a few sentences.

Fables are short allegorical stories about animals and objects which have human and mysterious qualities. They contain a distinct moral message, e.g. they illustrate the consequences of human weaknesses or foils, such as greed, envy, laziness, etc.

Fairy tales are traditional stories with elements of fantasy. They are usually set in a fantasy land and present stock characters such as `a princess', `a cruel stepmother', `the greedy king', a `good' or `bad'

giant, as well as supernatural objects, such as the magic tablecloth, golden egg etc

30. Rhetorical question.

Rhetorical question: a question which is not intended to obtain information but for emphasis, Rhetorical questions encourage the listener to reflect on what the implied answer to the question must be

31. Conceit, oxymoron.

Oxymoron is a combination of two words whose meanings are opposite, e.g. awfully nice, sweet

sorrows, darkness visible, little big Man

Conceit (an old word for concept) is a kind of complex metaphor which draws a parallel between

two very distant concepts.

32. Verisimilitude

Verisimilitude: the appearance of being true or real; plausibility.

33. Mock epic poetry.

The mock epic is a type of epic poetry which satirises some contemporary issues,

34. Dramatic monologue

Dramatic monologue is a type of lyric poetry in which a speaker addresses not the reader but a silent (hypothetical) listener

35. Characters; flat (static) and round (dynamic characters).

Characters or Dramatis Personae may usually be classified as protagonists and antagonists. We

can also distinguish between active (dynamic) and static (passive) characters.

36. Dialogue, monologue and soliloquy (in drama)

Dialogue: an exchange of words between characters.

Monologue: an extended speech made by one dramatic character.

Soliloquy: a long speech delivered by a dramatic character directly to the audience. It usually expresses his or her thoughts and feelings.

37. Hamartia, hubris, peripeteia, three unities (in a drama).

Hamartia: Aristotle's term for a `tragic flaw' (mistake) which causes the character's downfall

Hubris: an overweening pride or insolence that results in the misfortune of the protagonist of a tragedy. Hubris leads the protagonist to break a moral law or ignore a divine warning with disastrous results

Peripeteia (Greek for reversal): reversal of fortune for the protagonist, from failure to success or from success to failure.

Unities. In the Poetics, Aristotle said that a tragedy should have a single action, take place within a short time, and be confined to one location (one day, one major action and one setting).

38. Narration, narrator (omniscient, non-omniscient).

Narration or narrative, is the process of relating a sequence of events

The narrator is the one who tells the story (narration). The narrator is the imagined “voice”

transmitting the story to the reader.

Traditionally, we speak of the first-person narrator and the third-person narrator

The omniscient narrator knows everything about the characters, including their thoughts and

feelings.

When a narrator allows the reader to make his or her own judgments about characters or the

events, it is called neutral omniscience. When the narrator has omniscient knowledge about one or

two characters, but not all, we call it limited omniscience.

39. Frame narrative (or frame story)

It is a story which is contained within another story. The purpose of such narration is to give the reader a freedom of opinion.

40. Stream-of-consciousness or interior monologue.

Stream-of-consciousness or interior monologue is a narrative technique characteristic of the

modern novel. With reference to the novel, it denotes the flow of thoughts and

feelings which pass through a character's mind.



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