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Stagecraft and Dramatic Tension
Literature in English · JC 2 · Deepening Dramatic Analysis · 2.º Período

Stagecraft and Dramatic Tension

Investigate how playwrights use stage directions, props, and spatial dynamics to build tension.

TL;DR:The concept of the 'self' is a central pillar of the H2 Literature 'Mind and Self' elective. This topic explores how literature reflects and shapes our understanding of identity, from the stable, unified self of earlier periods to the fragmented, postmodern identities of the 20th and 21st centuries. Students examine how memory, social roles, and internal consciousness contribute to a character's sense of who they are.

MOE Syllabus OutcomesAO2: Analyse ways in which writers' choices of form, structure and language shape meanings.AO1: Respond critically to texts with understanding of how contexts shape meaning.

About This Topic

The concept of the 'self' is a central pillar of the H2 Literature 'Mind and Self' elective. This topic explores how literature reflects and shapes our understanding of identity, from the stable, unified self of earlier periods to the fragmented, postmodern identities of the 20th and 21st centuries. Students examine how memory, social roles, and internal consciousness contribute to a character's sense of who they are.

In the Singapore context, this often touches on the tension between individual identity and communal expectations. Students are encouraged to look at how authors use narrative techniques like stream of consciousness or non-linear structures to represent the complexity of the human mind. This topic comes alive when students can physically model the patterns of thought and identity through creative mapping and role-play.

Key Questions

  1. How do non-verbal elements contribute to dramatic meaning?
  2. In what ways does spatial arrangement reflect power dynamics?
  3. How is tension sustained and released across a scene?

Watch Out for These Misconceptions

Common MisconceptionIdentity is something a character is born with.

What to Teach Instead

Literature often shows identity as a process of 'becoming' or a social performance. Active learning tasks that focus on character development over time help students see identity as dynamic rather than fixed.

Common MisconceptionThe 'self' is always a single, coherent entity.

What to Teach Instead

Many modern texts explore the 'fragmented self.' Using collage-style visual activities can help students represent and understand characters who have conflicting or multiple identities.

Active Learning Ideas

See all activities

Frequently Asked Questions

How does memory affect the representation of the self in literature?
Memory is often the 'glue' that holds the self together, but it can also be unreliable. Authors use flashbacks or fragmented narratives to show how past trauma or nostalgia shapes a character's current identity. Think-pair-share activities on specific memory sequences can help clarify this.
What is the 'fragmented self' in modern literature?
It refers to the idea that identity is not a whole, but a collection of different roles and internal voices that may not always agree. This is often reflected in non-linear plots or multiple narrators.
How can active learning help students understand the 'Mind and Self' theme?
Active learning allows students to 'externalize the internal.' By using role-play to act out a character's internal conflicts or creating visual maps of a character's psyche, students make abstract psychological concepts concrete. This deepens their empathy and analytical precision when discussing complex character motivations in their essays.
Why do authors use stream of consciousness to show the self?
It's a technique designed to mimic the actual flow of human thought, including its jumps, repetitions, and preoccupations. It provides the most 'direct' access to a character's inner self. Students can practice this by writing their own short stream-of-consciousness pieces.
Edited by Adriana Perusin, Editor-in-Chief, Flip Education