Struggling with your prescribed literature?
Our Literature Study Guides provide insights and analysis of themes and characters and includes guidelines for writing your exam.
instructions to actors and directors of a play or film. These directions appear in a film or play script but are not the words to be said by the actors. Rather they tell the actors how to say the words, e.g. in a rage with anger, what to do with their bodies while they are talking, and where all the actors should be doing at different times during any scene. Stage directions also include details about how the stage should be arranged, e.g. a dishevelled country pub with a bar counter with three half-broken bar stools perched up against it. In the corner is a brightly coloured jukebox, etc.
language that does not offend. This phrase is normally used to criticise language that tries too...
(also called tilted angle) an unusual angle in photography/filmmaking that frames the subject in...
the lesson to be learnt from a story; also the description of character in a person.
a non-finite verb that cannot stand on its own, and generally includes the word to, e.g. I like...
in literature: the setting, atmosphere (mood) and context of a story.