The Field of Drama: How the Signs of Drama Create Meaning on Stage and ScreenSumari: Introduction -- The field of drama -- The nature of drama -- The signs of drama: icon, index, symbol -- The signs of drama: the frame -- The signs of drama: the actor -- The signs of drama: visuals and design -- The signs of drama: the words -- The signs of drama: music and sound -- The signs of stage and screen -- Structure as signifier -- The performers and the audience --The audience's competence: social conventions and personal meanings -- A hierarchy of meanings. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 18
Page 113
... depends on the general level of the ' key ' signifiers : a combination of all the decisions about which ele- ments ... depend on the basic assumptions of the society and that their power and effectiveness will depend on the audience's ...
... depends on the general level of the ' key ' signifiers : a combination of all the decisions about which ele- ments ... depend on the basic assumptions of the society and that their power and effectiveness will depend on the audience's ...
Page 121
... depend on surprise or unex- pected turns of events . There is also another type of suspense which springs from the ... depends on the totally unexpected . It must always be a subtle combination of the expected with the unexpected . We ...
... depend on surprise or unex- pected turns of events . There is also another type of suspense which springs from the ... depends on the totally unexpected . It must always be a subtle combination of the expected with the unexpected . We ...
Page 164
... depends on his or her mood and receptivity . The metaphorical ( Dante's ' allegorical ' ) level thus elevates individual facts into general and generalisable perceptions about the nature of the world , life , the human condition and may ...
... depends on his or her mood and receptivity . The metaphorical ( Dante's ' allegorical ' ) level thus elevates individual facts into general and generalisable perceptions about the nature of the world , life , the human condition and may ...
Other editions - View all
The Field of Drama: How the Signs of Drama Create Meaning on Stage and Screen Martin Esslin No preview available - 1987 |
Common terms and phrases
acting action actors actually analysis appear aspects attention audience basic become characters cinema clearly communication complex concentration consciously contain conventions convey costume course create critical cultural depends derive designer dialogue direct director drama dramatic performance effects elements emerge emotional essential example experience expression fact fictional field film function gestures given hand happening hence highly human iconic impact important indicate individual influence intended interpretation language less light live look make-up meaning merely metaphor moral movement multitude nature objects original patterns perceived person picture play political possible powerful practical present produces remain represented scene screen seen semiotics sense sequence sign systems signifiers situation situation comedy social society space specific spectator spectator's stage stand structure symbolic television tend theatre tion true turn ultimate understand verbal visual whole