Comedy

In the “Tragedy” discussion this week, you explored the function of conflict in a tragedy and how the conflict is enhanced by certain literary elements and techniques. In this discussion activity, you will focus on comedy.

Sharon E. Cooper’s Mistaken Identity: A Ten Minute Play is a modern comedy that centers on the quest for love and understanding. The function of the conflict in this play and the way the literary elements and techniques enhance the conflict is different from what we studied in Macbeth.

In your initial post
•State a conflict that you see present in Mistaken Identity: A Ten Minute Play (please refer to the Types of Conflicts Found in Literature.)
•Respond to one of the following, providing specific textual references to illustrate your ideas: ◦Describe a key conflict in the play and how it corresponds to a character’s development.
◦Describe two key literary techniques and elements and techniques of drama that aid in developing the conflict.
◦Explain how and why the conflict in this comedy is different from and/or similar to the conflict explored in tragedy.

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Initial post must be 200 to 300 words in length

ENG125: Introduction to Literature

 

 

List of Literary Techniques

 

Technique Description

Allusion A reference to a recognized literary work, person, historic

event, artistic achievement, etc. that enhances the

meaning of a detail in a literary work.

Climax

 

The crisis or high point of tension that becomes the story’s

turning point—the point at which the outcome of the

conflict is determined.

Conflict The struggle that shapes the plot in a story.

Dramatic irony

 

When the reader or audience knows more about the

action than the character involved.

Epiphany

 

A profound and sudden personal discovery.

Exposition

 

Setting and essential background information presented at

the beginning of a story or play.

Falling action

 

A reduction in intensity following the climax in a story or

play, allowing the various complications to be worked out.

Fate

 

An outside source that determines human events.

Figurative language Language used in a non-literal way to convey images and

ideas.

Figures of speech The main tools of figurative language; include similes and

metaphors..

First-person point of view Occurs when the narrator is a character in the story and

tells the story from his or her perspective.

Flashback

 

The description of an event that occurred prior to the

action in the story.

Foreshadowing

 

A technique a writer uses to hint or suggest what the

outcome of an important conflict or situation in a narrative

 

 

ENG125: Introduction to Literature

will be.

Imagery

 

A distinct representation of something that can be

experienced and understood through the senses (sight,

hearing, touch, smell, and taste), or the representation of

an idea.

Irony

 

A contradiction in words or actions. There are three types

of irony: verbal, situational, and dramatic.

Limited omniscient point of

view

 

Occurs when a narrator has access to the thoughts and

feelings of only one character in a story.

Metaphor

 

A figure of speech in which an implied comparison is made

between one object and another that is different from it.

Objective point of view

 

A detached point of view, evident when an external

narrator does not enter into the mind of any character in a

story but takes an objective stance, often to create a

dramatic effect.

Omniscient point of view

 

An all-knowing point of view, evident when an external

narrator has access to the thoughts and feelings of all the

characters in a story.

Persona

 

Literally, in Latin, “a mask.”

Plot

 

A connecting element in fiction; a sequence of interrelated,

conflicting actions and events that typically build to a

climax and bring about a resolution

Point of view

 

The perspective of the narrator who will present the action

to the reader.

Resolution The outcome of the action in a story or play.

Rising action Conflicts and circumstances that build to a high point of

tension in a story or play.

 

 

ENG125: Introduction to Literature

Situational irony When the outcome in a situation is the opposite of what is

expected.

Simile

A figure of speech that compares two objects or ideas that

are not ordinarily considered to be similar, linked by using

like or as.

Song

A lyrical musical expression, a source of emotional outlet

common in ancient communities and still influential in

contemporary culture.

Symbol An object, person, or action that conveys two meanings: its

literal meaning and something it stands for.

Third-person point of view

 

Occurs when the narrator tells the story using third-person

pronouns (he, she, they) to refer to the characters.

Tone In a literary work, the speaker’s attitude toward the reader

or the subject.

Verbal irony

 

When words are used to convey a meaning that is opposite

of their literal meaning.