A drama is a story that is written to be acted for an audience.
A play
Drama
Drama.
Fantasy
Play
Dialogue
The story of Oedipus would seem probably to the audience in fifth century BC because the plays that were written then, the audience would already be familiar with them as that was the way greek plays & theater worked.
no
Narrator or aside
dictionary- a composition in prose or verse presenting in dialogue or pantomime a story involving conflict or contrast of character dictionary- one intended to be acted on the stage dictionary- a play easy def.- a piece of writing written in separate lines to be said by actors acting out a story or plot that involves a problem between characters. This can also be a pieced of writing that is supposed to be acted out, sometimes even without words, but that still tells a story
That is a play.
Play
The audience.
A play is a story that is designed to be acted out, typically in a theater setting with actors portraying the characters. Plays involve dialogue, stage directions, and often use props and sets to enhance the storytelling. They are written specifically for live performance.
Fantasy
Fantasy
Drama
The difference between a play, a script, and a story is that a script is the words written out for the actors. The script will have words and direction written on it. A play is acted out on a stage. Actors in play use their bodies and voice to tell a story. A story can be in a book, or on television. It is the telling of a certain event.
Audience's perspective of the story. (APEX)
The story of Oedipus would seem probably to the audience in fifth century BC because the plays that were written then, the audience would already be familiar with them as that was the way greek plays & theater worked.
audience's perspective of the story APEX
The purpose in writing The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass was to inform others of the cruelness the slaves endured. Douglass' audience consisted of mostly white men (not very many slaves knew how to read). His story acted as fuel for the abolition
Rhoads, Dewey and Michie (Mark as Story) say that Mark's Gospel was designed to be performed orally by a narrator to an audience that would have, for the main part, been illiterate.