请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 dramaturgy
释义

Definition of dramaturgy in English:

dramaturgy

nounˈdraməˌtəːdʒi
mass noun
  • The theory and practice of dramatic composition.

    studies of Shakespeare's dramaturgy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Shakespeare studies call for a thorough knowledge of a wide spectrum of pre-Shakespearean, Elizabethan and Jacobean drama, the Elizabethan stage and dramaturgy.
    • There was something about the originality of his vision, the force of his dramaturgy, the raw truthfulness of his rendition of African-American life that made him an engaging dramatist.
    • What future role do authors project for Irish dramaturgy in mediating change in an increasingly transnational and European Ireland?
    • Too bad this engrossing drama wasn't given the usual flawless dramaturgy of the series.
    • Maybe it's not the most perfect example of dramaturgy you'll find but there's something here to chew on.
    • The jovial, comic book dramaturgy, featuring sudden changes of fortune and explosive showdown scenes, contributed to the immense success of this film.
    • That the tautness among these four grows steadily throughout the play, however, renders the crisis static and unobtrusive, and in this light the play's structure invites comparison to Chekhovian dramaturgy.
    • Another important theatrical tradition is that of Japanese mask-making in relation to Noh dramaturgy, the ceremonial art of the Samurai warriors of the early sixteenth century.
    • You were able to transport into these films this dramaturgy of light that is in your puppet films, where light works almost as a character.
    • There's been a revolution in dramaturgy and theatre style from the 20s onward.
    • Often dispensing with the formulas which govern dramatic construction, his dramaturgy conjures a magical world populated by a vast array of picaresque characters.
    • This kind of Internet dramaturgy is intensified to the point where sensationalism becomes the predominant theme, the mode operatis, for all the actors and actresses who hide behind the masks of their virtual identities.
    • I laughed with a kind of pity at the company which this year is claiming to combine ‘new writing, experimental concepts of dramaturgy and performance’… all in an hour at midday.
    • It is true, of course, that Shakespeare's dramaturgy allows him soliloquies and asides that make it easier to dramatize thought, but Hamlet's thoughts are still necessarily externalized.
    • Molasses-slow, set off by brushes and a disconsolate bass ostinato, her dramaturgy is shimmering and tragic without seeming mawkish.
    • If we restore the didactic dimension to Shakespeare's dramaturgy and consider the demands made upon the audience's belief and disbelief, we can see even these heroic figures as exemplars of the human struggle for salvation.
    • The three first films were very narrative, so I was using whatever tool was the most relevant to deal with that situation or specific dramaturgy of the film.
    • It is clear that the orthodox dramaturgy - the theatre of plays done in fixed settings for a settled audience relating stories as if they were happening to others - is finished.
    • Like Freud, Stravinsky takes King Oedipus as his sole source, though the libretto by Jean Cocteau employs a dramaturgy often seen as pre-empting the alienation effects of Brechtian theatre.
    • In this model, the political and economic marginalization of youth is represented by an iconography and dramaturgy of revolution, both local and global.
    Synonyms
    acting, the theatre, the stage, the performing arts, dramatic art, dramatics, stagecraft, theatricals, theatrics, the thespian art, show business

Derivatives

  • dramaturgic

  • adjectiveˌdraməˈtəːdʒɪk
    • And Ayckbourn's triune contribution is worthy of that master's dramaturgic know-how.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Lincoln was not about to pass up the lifetime opportunity this dramaturgic delay facilitated.
  • dramaturgical

  • adjectivedraməˌˈtəːdʒɪk(ə)l
    • We designed the conference scenario after the dramaturgical structure of a Brechtian play.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I have a strong dramaturgical sense of realizing the playwright's vision.
      • I think he has a dramaturgical role, one of social perspective and counseling.
      • This is a marriage of dramaturgical convenience.
      • Writers will also be given dramaturgical support and workshop time during September 2005, with professional actors and director, to assist them in the development of their work.
  • dramaturgically

  • adverb
    • Krainik proved to be just as tough as Fox but, crucially, more gifted in administration and development and with much more catholic tastes musically and dramaturgically.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He's quite rigorous dramaturgically, which I think is one of his great strengths, and he really, really works on the play trying to help you get it perfect.
      • The story of our life may be dramaturgically prolonged (and the collection contains a textbook's worth of ‘incremental perturbations’), but the ‘story of our life,’ the couple realize, ‘is not our life; it is our story.’
      • However I found it dramaturgically clumsy, and as a whole, the ballet had less power than Alfred Rodrigues's 1953 work on the same subject.
 
 

Definition of dramaturgy in US English:

dramaturgy

noun
  • The theory and practice of dramatic composition.

    studies of Shakespeare's dramaturgy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • If we restore the didactic dimension to Shakespeare's dramaturgy and consider the demands made upon the audience's belief and disbelief, we can see even these heroic figures as exemplars of the human struggle for salvation.
    • Often dispensing with the formulas which govern dramatic construction, his dramaturgy conjures a magical world populated by a vast array of picaresque characters.
    • Maybe it's not the most perfect example of dramaturgy you'll find but there's something here to chew on.
    • There's been a revolution in dramaturgy and theatre style from the 20s onward.
    • It is clear that the orthodox dramaturgy - the theatre of plays done in fixed settings for a settled audience relating stories as if they were happening to others - is finished.
    • The three first films were very narrative, so I was using whatever tool was the most relevant to deal with that situation or specific dramaturgy of the film.
    • This kind of Internet dramaturgy is intensified to the point where sensationalism becomes the predominant theme, the mode operatis, for all the actors and actresses who hide behind the masks of their virtual identities.
    • Like Freud, Stravinsky takes King Oedipus as his sole source, though the libretto by Jean Cocteau employs a dramaturgy often seen as pre-empting the alienation effects of Brechtian theatre.
    • Another important theatrical tradition is that of Japanese mask-making in relation to Noh dramaturgy, the ceremonial art of the Samurai warriors of the early sixteenth century.
    • There was something about the originality of his vision, the force of his dramaturgy, the raw truthfulness of his rendition of African-American life that made him an engaging dramatist.
    • Shakespeare studies call for a thorough knowledge of a wide spectrum of pre-Shakespearean, Elizabethan and Jacobean drama, the Elizabethan stage and dramaturgy.
    • Too bad this engrossing drama wasn't given the usual flawless dramaturgy of the series.
    • Molasses-slow, set off by brushes and a disconsolate bass ostinato, her dramaturgy is shimmering and tragic without seeming mawkish.
    • The jovial, comic book dramaturgy, featuring sudden changes of fortune and explosive showdown scenes, contributed to the immense success of this film.
    • In this model, the political and economic marginalization of youth is represented by an iconography and dramaturgy of revolution, both local and global.
    • It is true, of course, that Shakespeare's dramaturgy allows him soliloquies and asides that make it easier to dramatize thought, but Hamlet's thoughts are still necessarily externalized.
    • That the tautness among these four grows steadily throughout the play, however, renders the crisis static and unobtrusive, and in this light the play's structure invites comparison to Chekhovian dramaturgy.
    • You were able to transport into these films this dramaturgy of light that is in your puppet films, where light works almost as a character.
    • I laughed with a kind of pity at the company which this year is claiming to combine ‘new writing, experimental concepts of dramaturgy and performance’… all in an hour at midday.
    • What future role do authors project for Irish dramaturgy in mediating change in an increasingly transnational and European Ireland?
    Synonyms
    acting, the theatre, the stage, the performing arts, dramatic art, dramatics, stagecraft, theatricals, theatrics, the thespian art, show business
 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/12/22 23:11:18