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Wednesday, October 20, 2010
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salam, baraye nazar dadan, ebteda nazare khod ra type konid, sepas dar ghesmate Comment as gozinehe "Anonymous" ra entekhab konid ta nazaretat Post va sabt gardad. lotfan dar payane comment khod ra moarefi konid.
ReplyDeletedorood
Aghajani
hi allll,
ReplyDeletein my idea, though Mr, wright was murdered, mrs wright is victim of the story. by the atmosphere we see in the drama, it`s so obvious that she was suffering a lot of problem with her husband, whom he could n`t live with friendly.
hi,
ReplyDeleteto talk about why Mrs. wright didn't use gun, I think because women are emotional and cannot shoot with gun and so they cannot see the scene created with gun i.e. such scene is so violence for women to see and also women cannot fight or hurt men straight or face to face, because they fear of men and and their power and so they prefer to fight therm indirectly in the way men don't have any power to use or defend themselves.
I also think that gun could be a symbol of violence and power which means men are violence and powerful enough to shoot with gun and encounter with the killed things,but women are not.
Fereshteh(Rostamian)
i agree with Fereshteh on the idea that women are emotional and besides that, mrs. wright was a farmer housewife, maybe she didn`t know how to use a gun.
ReplyDeletebesides all that, what do you think about the diction? the words such as "I says"... " I dunno".... i couldn`t find any speacial clue about it!
Hossein Aghajani
(Arya)
as i said in the class, i think it uses such languages to be colloqial as the ordinary diologues are i.e as we talk in our usual life. This is the result of my search in the internet about language of drama : Since drama consists of the spoken word, language plays a role in drama insofar as the language of the characters offers clues to their backgrounds, feelings, and personalities.
ReplyDeleteDramatic language is modelled on real-life conversations among people, and yet, when one watches a play, one also has to consider the differences between real talk and drama talk. Dramatic language is ultimately always constructed or ‘made up’ and it often serves several purposes. On the level of the story-world of a play, language can of course assume all the pragmatic functions that can be found in real-life conversations, too: e.g., to ensure mutual understanding and to convey information, to persuade or influence someone, to relate one’s experiences or signal emotions, etc. However, dramatic language is often rhetorical and poetic, i.e., it uses language in ways which differ from standard usage in order to draw attention to its artistic nature (see Language in Literature). When analysing dramatic texts, one ought to have a closer look at the various forms of utterance available for drama. hope to help you. but did any one bought the book Mrs. Hami introduced? she said the answer of this question is in it.
Fereshteh Rostamian
Hi back,
ReplyDeletethank you a lot for your helpful answer FERESHTEH, it has been along since i was thinking about the Diction but i couldn`t find any reasonable answer. considering your answer, i have seen that quite reasonable:
"Dramatic language is modeled on real-life conversations among people".
i myself enjoyed reading the deep and elaborating Drama, that was medicine for the mind to see new horizons in the Dramatic atmosphere of Life.
Arya
so glad to help you ARYA. that was a nice drama with interesting points, but its subject(women are inferior than men)was discussed last term too and I don't know why it is repeated this term again, i think it would be better to discuss about a drama with newer subject this term, but it has not been occured till now and i think we should wait till reading Antigone to see what its subject is.
ReplyDeleteFereshteh