Theatre Glossary (Mike Green)
Note: If you wish to use this in your own Moodle course, you can download the entries from the Moodle content database here.
Navegue por el glosario usando este índice.
Especial | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | Ñ | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | TODAS
5 |
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5 W's Who refers to roles and characterizations. Where refers to setting, locale, environment. What refers to dramatic action. When refers to time of day, year. Why refers to motivation. |
A |
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ActingThe process of creating roles and characters in dramatic context. (see Characterization). |
Aesthetic DistanceThe perspective of a member of the audience in relation to performance. A work is "distanced" so that it can be seen aesthetically and not confused with reality. Aesthetic distance permits objective response even in the face of subjective experiences. |
Aesthetic QualitiesThose characteristics of a work that place it somewhere on the scale of beautiful to ugly. |
Aesthetic ResponseA person's reaction to the emotional values and cognitive meanings of a work of art (e.g., a theatre experience). |
AestheticsThe branch of philosophy that deals with theories of art and beauty. |
Artistic DisciplineAdherence to beliefs, values, and behaviors deemed accepted in the artistic field. |
Audience One or more persons who observe actors in a scene or play in a classroom or a theatre. In theatre education, audience is sometimes loosely used to mean the reflective performer as well as classmates, other students, faulty, or the public. |
C |
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Character A person, animal, or entity in a story, scene, or play with specific distinguishing physical, mental, and attitudinal attributes. |
Character DimensionsPhysical aspects (e.g., sex, age, external traits), social aspects (e.g., family, occupation), and psychological aspects (e.g., attitudes, motivation, values) of a character. |