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Dramatica Theory Book
How
This Book is Arranged
table of contents
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Part of what makes
a story great is its underlying dramatic structure and part is the manner
in which that structure is related to an audience, often called "storytelling".
Therefore, this book is divided into two principal sections: The Elements
of Structure and The Art of Storytelling.
In The Elements of Structure you will explore the essential components
that occur in all complete stories as they appear in Character, Theme,
Plot, and Genre. In the Art of Storytelling you will examine the Four
Stages of Communication that occur between an author and an audience:
Storyforming, Storyencoding, Storyweaving, and Reception.
By the time you have finished, you will have gained a whole new understanding
of what stories are and a whole new set of tools for creating them. For
a glimpse of how some of Dramatica's basic concepts can be employed to
improve a story, you might want to take a look at a constructive criticism
of the motion picture Jurassic Park appearing in the Epilogue section.
You will note that the majority of examples provided in this book are
drawn from motion pictures. This stems from the authors' personal backgrounds
in the motion picture industry. Dramatica, however, is a theory of story
-- not a theory of screenplay. All of the dramatic concepts presented
here are equally applicable to any medium of story expression.
Note about Pronoun Usage: Some characters are best looked at by
their dramatic functions. To help keep this perspective, we use the impersonal
pronoun "it" when referring to such characters. Other characters
are best explored in terms of their growth. To help draw the reader into
a closer relationship with such a character, we use the personal pronoun,
"he". Earlier editions of this book used "she" as
the personal pronoun. Because of this uncommon usage, readers were jarred
out of a relationship with personal characters, rather than being drawn
in, defeating our purpose. As a result, this edition employs masculine
pronouns.
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