About This Book
A study defines the dramatic monologue as a distinct literary form and analyzes its components—speaker, listener, situation, temporal connection, and argument—tracing the form's history and its demands on the reader. A second section offers practical guidance for vocal and physical interpretation, discussing mental actions, voice modulation, bodily gesture, metre, dialect, props, common faults, and the monologue's significance. Illustrative readings of representative monologues by Browning demonstrate how close textual study and oral rendition reveal psychological motive and dramatic effect.
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