In the highly artificial schema from which the term 'rising action' is drawn, Act II of the play is always the rising action.
There isn't much action at all in this short story. It is mostly all drama. I guess you could say that the final act of execution is the rising action.
the rising action of this lottery ticket is the rising of the action...
What is the rising action of the book song of the trees
Keith Powell Directs a Play - 2008 Act II Rising Action 1-2 was released on: USA: 1 November 2008
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The term "rising action" is a term which only has application to a critical device called Freytag's Pyramid, in which it refers to the action in Act 2 of a typical five-act play, and by "typical" I here mean a Shakespearean Tragedy, since the Freytag Pyramid doesn't always fit the histories and comedies. Since the Prologue of Romeo and Juliet is not a five-act play (it is in fact a sonnet), the Freytag Pyramid and therefore the term "rising action" cannot apply to it. You could probably see that coming when you heard it was a prologue, since there is never any action of any kind in a Prologue (if there were, it would be an "Induction", as in The Taming of the Shrew).
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No, climax is what the rising action leads up to.
The rising action is before the climax. There the tension rises.