赛派号

手机壳材质pc和abc的区别 Dramatic irony

Watch the dramatic irony unfold in a film adaptation of O. Henry's classic short story “The Gift of the Magi”Watch the dramatic irony unfold in a film adaptation of O. Henry's classic short story “The Gift of the Magi”This 1980 dramatization of O. Henry's classic short story “The Gift of the Magi” demonstrates the author's mastery of dramatic irony.See all videos for this article

dramatic irony, a literary device by which the audience’s or reader’s understanding of events or individuals in a work surpasses that of its characters. Dramatic irony is a form of irony that is expressed through a work’s structure: an audience’s awareness of the situation in which a work’s characters exist differs substantially from that of the characters’, and the words and actions of the characters therefore take on a different—often contradictory—meaning for the audience than they he for the work’s characters. Dramatic irony is most often associated with the theatre, but examples of it can be found across the literary and performing arts.

Othello (1995)Othello (1995)Laurence Fishburne in the title role of Othello, with Kenneth Branagh (right) as Iago, 1995.

Dramatic irony abounds in works of tragedy. In Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, for example, the audience knows that Oedipus’s acts are tragic mistakes long before he recognizes his own errors. Western writers whose works are traditionally cited for their adept use of dramatic irony include William Shakespeare (as in Othello’s trust of the treacherous Iago in the play Othello), Voltaire, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Jane Austen, Thomas Hardy, and Henry James, among many others. Dramatic irony can also be found in such works as O. Henry’s short story “The Gift of the Magi” and Anton Chekhov’s story “Lady with the Dog.”

Related Topics: irony See all related content

Dramatic irony is frequently contrasted with verbal irony. The former is embedded in a work’s structure, whereas the latter typically operates at the level of words and sentences that are understood by audiences or readers to carry meanings different from the words themselves when interpreted literally. (Sarcasm can be considered a form of verbal irony.) Dramatic irony is also sometimes equated with tragic irony, situational irony, or structural irony; all those terms are also sometimes understood to exist within a hierarchy that establishes narrow differences of meaning among themselves.

版权声明:本文内容由互联网用户自发贡献,该文观点仅代表作者本人。本站仅提供信息存储空间服务,不拥有所有权,不承担相关法律责任。如发现本站有涉嫌抄袭侵权/违法违规的内容, 请发送邮件至lsinopec@gmail.com举报,一经查实,本站将立刻删除。

上一篇 没有了

下一篇没有了