Skip to main content
Dramatic Structure and Social Status in Shakespeare’s Plays

Article

Dramatic Structure and Social Status in Shakespeare’s Plays

Text display options

Abstract

This article discusses ways that dramatic structure can be analyzed through the use of social titles in Shakespeare’s plays. Freytag’s (1863) pyramid of dramatic structure is based on patterns he found in Shakespearean and Greek tragedy; more recently, computational methods are being employed to model narrative structure at scale. However, there has not yet been a study which discusses whether or not specific lexical items can be indicative of dramatic structure. Using Shakespeare’s plays as an example, this essay fills the gap by observing how social titles can be used to explore the viability of narrative structure.

Keywords:

  • social identity
  • vocatives
  • dramatic structure

How to Cite:

Froehlich, H., (2020) “Dramatic Structure and Social Status in Shakespeare’s Plays”, Journal of Cultural Analytics 5(1). https://doi.org/10.22148/001c.12556 (external link, opens in new tab).

Share

Files

Issue

Information

Metrics

  • Views: 0
  • Downloads: 0

Citation

RIS (download.) BibTeX (download.)

File Checksums

(MD5)
  • XML: 00ecba571c5a753b1dcc8620abfc5cc8
  • PDF: 965ebe7d4f3be8c8bd62a9ec8e20f129

Table of Contents