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Black Comedy and the Principles of Screenwriting/The ActionsMaxwell, Nicholas Elliott, nmaxwel1@bigpond.net.au January 2008 (has links)
This exegesis will aim to research and analyse the conventions of writing a black comedy in a feature film script. As a screenwriter with a particular interest in black comedy, my aim is to explore the technical structures of black comedy in order to facilitate the writing of a tragicomic screenplay. We will attempt to define the components of black comedy and survey its origin in theatre and literature. The exegesis will aim to explore what components comprise the middle ground between drama and humour and position it in relation to the classical genres of tragedy and comedy. The exegesis will also aim to examine the function of black comedy in relation to the psychology of the protagonist and the audience, as well as defining the characteristics of the genre in the context of Screenwriting. The exegesis will observe the film adaptation of the renowned play, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? as a case study. The research will inform the writing of the feature length screenplay entitled The Actions.
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A Study of Hwang-Hai's WorksLin, Yi-jin 16 June 2007 (has links)
A Study of Hwang-Hai's Works
Yi-jin Lin
Abstract
In the study, Hwang-hai's science fiction is researched with various definition by the east and western scholars. Ttracing back his life and writing experience results in the deep comprehension of his writing theme ¡X the reflection upon science and civilization.
The research range includes Hwang-hai's writing art and skills of science fiction, such as fantastic time and space, characters and plots arrangements, and styles with the reference of western narrative theories, traditional literary theories, and science fiction theories.
Hwang-hai's writing pioneering creativities are the fairy tales characteristics between the children literature and adult. That can be helpful to distinguish Hwang-hai from other science fiction writers in Taiwan with the viewpoints of education and literary sociology.
The relative multi-pronged research can bring out not only the prospective future of science fiction in Taiwan but also the meaning of Hwang-hai's science fiction in our days, by the concepts of the literary artistic worth to social educational function from his works.
Keywords: Hwang-hai, Science fiction, Children Literature, Black Comedy.
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Shit ShowLehe, Patrick J. 01 April 2020 (has links) (PDF)
When an overzealous Christian girl attends a massive music festival, she must stop the headlining girl band, secretly a coven of witches, from opening a portal to Hell during their final encore.
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???Bury, burn or dump???: black humour in the late twentieth century.Murray, Kristen A, School of Media, Theatre & Film & School of Sociology, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
In humour studies research, there have been few attempts to elucidate why black humour was such a prevalent, powerful force in late twentieth century culture and why it continues to make a profound impression in the new millennium. As Dana Polan (1991) laments: ???Rarely have there been attempts to offer material, historically specific explanations of particular manifestations of the comic???.1 This thesis offers an interdisciplinary analysis of black humour in the late twentieth century. I contend that the experience of black humour emerges from the intricacies of human beliefs and behaviours surrounding death and through the diverse rituals that shape experiences of loss. I suggest that black humour is an attempt to articulate the tension between the haunting absence and disturbing presence of death in contemporary society. Chapter 1 of this thesis offers an historical and etymological perspective on black humour. In Chapter 2, I argue that the increasing privatisation and medicalisation of death, along with the overt mediatisation of death, creates a problematic juxtaposition. I contend that these unique social conditions created, and continue to foster, an ideal environment for the creation and proliferation of black humour. In Chapters 3 and 4, I examine the structures and functions of black humour through three key theories of humour: incongruity, catharsis and superiority. Chapter 5 looks at ways in which the experience of black humour creates resolutions and forces dissonances for people entwined with loss. In this final chapter, I also consider how black humour may help people make meaning from issues surrounding death. Throughout this theoretical discussion, I interweave the analysis of a range of scenes from contemporary black comic texts (i.e. plays, screenplays and television scripts). On the whole, this thesis works towards a more complex, specific understanding of the phenomenon of black humour within a social context.
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???Bury, burn or dump???: black humour in the late twentieth century.Murray, Kristen A, School of Media, Theatre & Film & School of Sociology, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
In humour studies research, there have been few attempts to elucidate why black humour was such a prevalent, powerful force in late twentieth century culture and why it continues to make a profound impression in the new millennium. As Dana Polan (1991) laments: ???Rarely have there been attempts to offer material, historically specific explanations of particular manifestations of the comic???.1 This thesis offers an interdisciplinary analysis of black humour in the late twentieth century. I contend that the experience of black humour emerges from the intricacies of human beliefs and behaviours surrounding death and through the diverse rituals that shape experiences of loss. I suggest that black humour is an attempt to articulate the tension between the haunting absence and disturbing presence of death in contemporary society. Chapter 1 of this thesis offers an historical and etymological perspective on black humour. In Chapter 2, I argue that the increasing privatisation and medicalisation of death, along with the overt mediatisation of death, creates a problematic juxtaposition. I contend that these unique social conditions created, and continue to foster, an ideal environment for the creation and proliferation of black humour. In Chapters 3 and 4, I examine the structures and functions of black humour through three key theories of humour: incongruity, catharsis and superiority. Chapter 5 looks at ways in which the experience of black humour creates resolutions and forces dissonances for people entwined with loss. In this final chapter, I also consider how black humour may help people make meaning from issues surrounding death. Throughout this theoretical discussion, I interweave the analysis of a range of scenes from contemporary black comic texts (i.e. plays, screenplays and television scripts). On the whole, this thesis works towards a more complex, specific understanding of the phenomenon of black humour within a social context.
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