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Drama Literary Terms

Horizontales
A person, thing or event that represents something else
When the audience knows more than the characters, when the characters' words carry a larger meaning that the character doesn't perceive or realize
Major division within a play
Literary art form that recreates human life
Jokes or word play within the context of a scene
Central message of a play often expressed as a general statement of life or an observation of life
More common elements of this art form: reason vs. emotion, separation and reconciliation
The method a writer uses to create a character in a play
Drama that gives the audience an experience of extreme sadness
A special kind of concise paradox that brings together two contradictory statements-"organized chaos"-" deafening silence"
An ordinary form of written and spoken language. It is the language that lacks the special features of poetry.
Weakness or character defect
Force working against the protagonist
Verticales
A humorous scene or speech intended to light the mood of a dramatic production.
A speech given by a character alone on stage.
Another example of a speech or verbal presentation given by a single character in order to express his or her collection of thoughts and ideas aloud.
Poetry that most resembles natural speech, made up of unrhymed lines of iambic pentameter
Mistaken identity, idyllic settings, happy endings, idyllic settings
A phrase that conveys a figurative meaning that is difficult or impossible to understand based solely on a literal interpretation of the words or phrase. All that glisters is not gold. This literary device is usually particular to a specific region, culture, language or dialect.
The protagonist is the one with whom audiences identify.
A pattern in literature that is found in a variety of works from different cultures throughout the ages.
A reference to someone or something outside of the text, alluding to other literary works, famous individuals, historical events to add depth to the narrative.
Lyric poem of 14 lines, commonly written in iambic pentameter
In drama, the action is often divided into acts and scenes; each scene represents an episode in the plot and typically occurs at a single place and time
A type of meter or rhythm that has five unstressed syllables each followed by a stressed syllable
Central character
Conversation between two or more characters
Verbal irony
Character whose personality and attitude contrasts sharply with those of another character