Protasis
In drama, a protasis is the introductory part of a play, usually its first act. The term was coined by the fourth-century Roman grammarian Aelius Donatus. He defined a play as being made up of three separate parts, the other two being epitasis and catastrophe. In modern dramatic theory the term dramatic arc has substantially the same meaning,[1] though with slightly different divisions.
References
- ^ "Dramatic Arc".
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Narrative
- Antagonist
- Archenemy
- Character arc
- Character flaw
- Characterization
- Confidant
- Deuteragonist
- False protagonist
- Focal character
- Foil
- Gothic double
- Hamartia
- Hero
- Narrator
- Protagonist
- Stock character
- Straight man
- Supporting character
- Title character
- Tritagonist
- Villain
- Ab ovo
- Action
- Backstory
- Chekhov's gun
- Cliché
- Cliffhanger
- Conflict
- Deus ex machina
- Dialogue
- Dramatic structure
- Eucatastrophe
- Foreshadowing
- Flashback
- Flashforward
- Frame story
- In medias res
- Kishōtenketsu
- MacGuffin
- Pace
- Plot device
- Plot twist
- Poetic justice
- Red herring
- Reveal
- Self-insertion
- Shaggy dog story
- Stereotype
- Story arc
- Story within a story
- Subplot
- Suspense
- Trope
- Alternate history
- Backstory
- Crossover
- Dreamworld
- Dystopia
- Fictional location
- Utopia
- Worldbuilding
- Allegory
- Bathos
- Comic relief
- Diction
- Figure of speech
- Imagery
- Mode
- Mood
- Narration
- Narrative techniques
- Show, don't tell
- Stylistic device
- Suspension of disbelief
- Symbolism
- Tone
- Act
- Freytag's Pyramid
- Exposition/Protasis
- Rising action/Epitasis
- Climax/Peripeteia
- Falling action/Catastasis
- Denouement/Catastrophe
- Linear narrative
- Nonlinear narrative
- Premise
- Types of fiction with multiple endings
(List)
- Autobiography
- Biography
- Fiction
- Nonfiction
- Dominant narrative
- Fiction writing
- Continuity
- Canon
- Reboot
- Retcon
- Parallel novel
- Prequel / Sequel
- Continuity
- Genre
- Literary science
- Literary theory
- Narrative identity
- Narrative paradigm
- Narrative therapy
- Narratology
- Political narrative
- Rhetoric
- Screenwriting
- Storytelling
- Tellability
- Verisimilitude
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