1- A huge and complex subject - but well covered in the literature
2- Raises economic issues
3- Raise creative issues
4- ................
Sorry for the last one , I don't remember it but I hope that these tree help you my friend !
Answer:
A. devices, phrases, or actions that have, over time, become so common that their meaning is immediately apparent.
Explanation:
Dramatic conventions are devices, phrases, or actions that have, over time, become so common that their meaning is immediately apparent.
In playwrights, convention can be defined as a technique used by the actors regularly in a drama in order to make the audience become familiar with and to enable them attach specific meaning to it. Thus, dramatic conventions depicts the nature of a character or an actor in a drama.
<em>Some dramatic conventions which can be employed in dramas are; soliloquy, slow motion, adding narrations, split roles or multiple roles etc. </em>
For future viewers, the correct answers are B, C, and D. I took the test and these were the correct answers.
<span> "Chopin both begins and ends with a statement about Louise Mallard's heart trouble, which turns out to have both a physical and a mental component. In the first paragraph of "The Story of an Hour," Chopin uses the term "heart trouble" primarily in a medical sense, but over the course of the story, Mrs. Mallard's presumed frailty seems to be largely a result of psychological repression rather than truly physiological factors. The story concludes by attributing Mrs. Mallard's death to heart disease, where heart disease is "the joy that kills." This last phrase is purposefully ironic, as Louise must have felt both joy and extreme disappointment at Brently's return, regaining her husband and all of the loss of freedom her marriage entails. The line establishes that Louise's heart condition is more of a metaphor for her emotional state than a medical reality."</span>