Monday, March 11, 2019

Create dramatic tension Essay

English Course track down- How does milling machine use Eddie to create dramatic tension for the audience in A View From A Bridge?We could say that A View from a bridge, is a calamity for a number of reasons. Most importantly, if we comp be the work of Arthur miller to a Greek tragedy, we can immediately draw a parallel.In a Greek tragedy, the hero or protagonist continuously has a fatal flaw or harmatia in his roughage. This causes him to make a dingy decision, or to commit an supernatural act, which then spirals into the characters peripeteia or eventual downfall. He must then learn his mistake, suffer for his unnatural act and (usually) die.Another important characteristic of a Greek tragedy is the utter. Usually a single character takes this role and is used to summarize the play, issue new characters, and explain any action taking place.The 2 important things that make the chorus speaker different from an ordinary character are that he can speak directly with the audi ence, but cannot deputise at any point in the play- a useful subterfuge for creating dramatic tension.The idea of a tragic protagonist is illustrated in A View from a bridge, using Eddie Carbone, a typical Joe Bloggs created by Miller to illustrate an ordinary person, or representative of a nation or class.Eddie is a very ordinary homosexual, decent, hard working and charitable, a man no one could dislike. This is significant because it causes the audience to feel both lenience and fear for the character of Eddie.However, like the protagonist of an ancient drama, he has a fatal flaw or harmatia, in the form of the lust he harbors for his niece Catherine.Eddie does not really understand his improper desire for Catherine, and thus is unavailing to hide it from those around him or from the audience. In him, we see this primitive proclivity naked, or exposed. This explains Alfieris remark at the end of the play, when he says that Eddie allowed himself to be wholly known.It is Eddi es desire for Catherine that drives him into making a defile decision. When the cousins Marco and Rodolpho catch from Italy, and Catherine falls for Rodolpho, Eddies jealousy overboils in the form of a injurious decision in this case -calling the Immigration Bureau. The consequences, both social and psychological, of this wrong action, destroy him.As Aristotle said, at best, a tragic hero would complot pity and terror from the audience if he is neither thoroughly faithful nor thoroughly evil, but a mixture of both. This is a perfect combining to create dramatic tension for the audience, because as the audience is ordinary, or venomous like Eddie, we feel terror when we see him make a bad decision, because we know that we are capable of making a bad sagacity too. Thus we feel pity for Eddie, as his crime doesnt expect evil enough for the degree of suffering he goes through. It seems his suffering is disproportionate to his flaw.The terror felt by the audience is greatly added to by Alfieri, the chorus speaker, who is used throughout the play to promote a sense of tragedy and inevitability, largely due to the fact that he cannot intervene. This leaves the audience powerless to condition the plot run its bloody course, linking back to the idea of inescapable fate or destiny. This makes for a powerful dramatic device, as the audience are compelled to watch what will become of Eddie, even though, deep down, we are nigh certain of his untimely end.Alfieri is alike important, as he helps to summarize the play, introduce new characters, and explain any action taking place. He also helps clarify the plot to the audience, and hints at underlying themes in the rest of the keep -especially the links to justice, poverty, and tragedy. He presents the idea of justice in Sicilian communities by mentioning Yale and other gangsters, and highlights how important justice is to Italians.

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