Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare (Pdfbookshub.blogspot.com)
Drama Terms Romeo and Juliet By: William Shakespeare.
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Transcript of Drama Terms Romeo and Juliet By: William Shakespeare.
Drama TermsRomeo and JulietBy: William Shakespeare
Elizabethan Terms:
0The Elizabethan Era was named after Queen Elizabeth I of England (who reigned from 1558-1604).
0Renaissance: A period of rebirth, originating in Italy in the 1300’s. This was a time during which great accomplishments were made in science, art and literature (lots of change)
0Elizabethan Drama: Playwrights turned away from writing about religious subjects and began writing more sophisticated plays, drawing on ancient Greek and Roman models.
Drama Terms0Soliloquy: A speech by a person who is talking to
him/herself; used to reveal their inner thoughts and feelings to the audience
0Monologue: A talk/speech by a single speaker who is speaking alone but others can hear them (kind of like a solo in a musical)
0Aside: Words spoken so as not to be heard by the other characters, but are intended for the audience only (think Ferris Bueller’s Day Off).
Drama Terms Continued:0Tragedy: Plays where disaster falls upon the
hero/heroine (unlike comedies where everyone gets married in the end, in tragedies, the characters usually die in the end)
0Tragic Hero: A character who makes an error in Judgment or has a fatal flaw, which leads to their own demise or the demise of others (example: Batman/Bruce Wayne from Dark Knight Rises)
0Apparition: A supernatural appearance of a person/thing, especially a ghost or phantom (like in A Christmas Carol when Scrooge is visited by 3 ghosts)
0Foil: A character who contrast well with another character; they are perfect opposites (example: Edward and Jacob in Twilight)
Literary terms:0Allusion: A reference, in literature, to something
either directly or by implication0Dramatic Irony: When the audience knows what is
going on, but the characters do not!0Tone (*): The way something is said, the way is
sounds and the emotion conveyed(example: If you sass your mom, she might say, “Don’t take that tone of voice with me young lady”)
0Motif: Recurring idea (pattern) in literature0Anachronism: Object out of place/time (like a
computer in the wild west)0Pun: the humorous use of a word/phrase to suggest
two or more meanings at the same time
Form and Structure Terms:0Meter: Poetic measure; the arrangement of words in a
regularly measured, patterned, or rhythmic lines/verses
0Blank Verse: Verse where the lines do not rhyme, but they share the same meter (usually iambi pentameter)
0 Iamb: An unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable
0 Iambic Pentameter: five verse feet with each foot in an iamb (ten syllable line with the pattern going stressed, unstressed, stress, unstressed)
Poetry Terms:0Couplet: two consecutive lines of
poetry that rhyme0Quatrain: a poem or stanza within a
poem, always consisting of 4 lines.0Sonnet: 14 line poem written in
iambic pentameter0English (Shakespearean) Sonnet: Has
3 quatrains, and ends with a couplet