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DRAM 1101: EXAM 1

theatre
art form that uses live performance
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Theatron
Seeing place
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LORT's
League of Resident Theatres
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theatre as a place
a structure that varies in size, decoration and functionality 1 requirement: an empty space for a place to act and place to watch
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theatre as a company
collaborative art -collaborators engage in shared vision -can refer to a category: -"The Elizabethan Theatre", "The American Theatre", "Theatre of the 1940s"
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theatre as an occupation
work in two senses: as labor and as play -labor: demands from physical exertion (many work in multiple roles) -play: theatre is calculated, play is not -theatre transforms work into art
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theatre as an art
involves impersonation -it differentiates between actor and character -makes it unique among art forms involves a paradox -the actor must "disappear" behind character -yet actor is applauded and celebrated
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theatre as performance
-we all "perform" everyday (in classrooms, public spaces, sports, etc.) -theatre is formal -uses 2 types of performance: -presentational -representational
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Presentational Performance
acknowledges audience -example: stand-up comedy
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representational performance
does not acknowledge audience, more common
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Theatre is live
uses live performance -its "liveliness" gives it 3 fundamental forces: -rapport between audience and actor -relationship among audience -immediacy
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ritual
a stereotyped sequence of activities involving gestures, words and objects performed in a particular place
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ritual & theatre similarities
-often use dialogue -costumes and props -follow set sequence of events -repetition of words, roles, movements and actions
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ritual & theatre differences
-theatre is not primarily intended for prayer or intended to achieve efficacious (effective) results -theatre's focus is often on human beings--- their joys, pains and fears
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theatre & sports similarities
-perform for an audience -costumes/uniforms -director/coach -generate response from audience -live show -perform on a stage -takes practice -choreographed movement
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theatre & sports differences
-*impersonation* -sports= factually real -theatre= an illusion -suspension of disbelief: relies on willingness to accept truth/reality -a theatrical event that is scripted has a predetermined outcome -sports events outcome is not predetermined, it is random -popular culture & elite entertainment
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impersonation
-sports= factually real -theatre= an illusion
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suspension of disbelief
relies on willingness to accept truth/reality
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"low brow"
sports
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"high brow"
theatre (upper class)
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amphitheatres
outdoor w/ no roof built on slant/raised seating -theatrical space that has most potential for realistic spectacle/scenery
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proscenium stage
audience all on one side giving more space for stage to change scenes and costumes -offers a lot more backstage space where you an hide machinery -1.000 spectators *BEST FOR REALISTIC SCENERY*
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box set
walls are fixed, stationary set, walls/doors/windows don't move -looks realistic with detail to give sense of life and reality -most popular EXAMPLE: A Doll's House (1880)
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thrust stage
where the audience is seated on at least 2 but not more than 3 sides of the stage -audience surrounding half of the stage (200-300 spectators) -intimate, closer to audience
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disadvantages of proscenium stage
-there is a lot of space for actor to fill -worry about projection in voice to be heard -less detailing for costume and scenery -less intimacy (further away from action)
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disadvantages of thrust stage
-actor has to worry about putting back to the audience -harder to have a curtain/scenery changes happen in front of audience EXAMPLE: classroom/lecture hall is a thrust stage
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arena stage
audience on all 4 sides (stage in middle) -major impact on scenic elements, lighting, etc. -telling a different story on each side due to impact on audience -there isn't a bad seat -good for small budgets/might not have to do a lot of scenery
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disadvantages of arena stage
-actors have to worry about angles available -changing props will be in full view
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blackbox
4 walls (typically black) with no fixed stage or seating -seating and stage are moveable -great for intimacy
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disadvantage of blackbox stage
smaller
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comedy
-humorously addresses topical and timely situations -doesn't have same historical reputationas tragedy -popularly, a funny play; classically, a play that ends happily; metaphorically, a play with some humor that celebrates the eternal ironies of human existence
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tragedy
-a play that treats, at the most uncompromising level, human suffering -"goat song" in greek -Aristotle refined its meaning into the most celebrated of dramatic genres -tells a story -centers on great person (protagonist) -ends in death/demise
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melodrama
-the designation of a suspenseful, plot-oriented drama featuring all-good heroes, all-bad villains, simplistic dialogue, soaring moral conclusions, and bravura acting -originally a term for musical theatre -exotic locales (setting is exotic) -special effects (hurricane, fire) -latest inventions (machinery, electricity) (moving panorama) -popular novels, crimes
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farce
highly comic, lighthearted, gleefully contrived drama, usually involving stock situations (such as mistaken identity or discovered lovers' trysts), punctuated with broad physical stunts and pratfalls
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satire
a play or other literary work that ridicules social follies, beliefs, religions, or human vices, almost always in a lighthearted vein -not usually a lasting theatre form -"Satire is what closes on Saturday night"
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1. plot
-structure of action, timetable of plays events -the events of the play, expressed as a series of linked dramatic actions -in common terms, it is the story of the play -according to Aristotle, it is the most important component of a play -components= climax, exposition, resolution, falling action, rising action
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climax
the point of no return, when the focus switches from the problem to the solution
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exposition
the part of the story where you are introduced to characters and setting (warm-up)
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resolution
problem is solved or unsolveable
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falling action
focuses on solving problem
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rising action
events focus on the conflict or problem
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inciting incident
the single action that initiates the major conflict of the play
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genre
a term used in dramatic theory to signify a distinctive class or category of play-- tragedy, comedy, farce, and so on
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Aristotle
-wrote Poetics (335 B.C.E.) -first major dramatic critic in the Western Drama -first major genre classification -6 Components of Theatre
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hamartia
tragic flaw or fatal mistake -scholars differ as to whether Aristotle was referring primarily to a character's ignorance of certain facts or to a character's moral defect
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catharsis
purge emotionsn (of pity/fear) -the purging or cleansing of the terror and pity that the audience feels during the climax of a tragedy
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protagonist
-"good guy" -the carrier of the action, in any drama, the principal character, often opposed by an antagonist
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antagonist
-"bad guy" -the opposer of the action -the opponent of the protagonist
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dramaturgy
how action of play is structured -2 ways to analyze dramaturgy -"vertical" axis= components of play -"horizontal" axis= temporal experience/order
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Aristotle's 6 Components
1. Plot 2. Character 3. Theme 4. Diction 5. Music 6. Spectacle *new component= 7. Convention*
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2. character
-quality and complexity of character to make you as an audience care about them
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3. theme
basic idea of play/the thought or message/central idea
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4. diction
words, language (poetical, lyrical, etc.) of text -tone or imagery of play
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5. music
spoken or sung/way language is spoken in play
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6. spectacle
special effects, visual aspects of stage (costumes, lighting, etc.)
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7. convention
rules of agreement between you and audience that allows it to work
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horizontal axis
order and timing of what happens in a play -play is divided into 3 waves: -preplay -play -postplay
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vertical axis
what are components -Aristotle broke down dramaturgy to 6 parts (from most to least important) -add new component=convention
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preplay
what attracts the audience to the play
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play
concerned with events within script -binds audience together
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postplay
you and the audience have left the theatre and are discussing the play after -end of show when bows and curtain call -discussion with panel of experts
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playwright
creating dramatic action -literary and non-literary -not just literary text (movement, lighting, scenery) -text is about action (relating an observable, dramatizable/event writing) -no set formula (depends on the playwright) -all plays deal with 3 major areas: dialogue, conflict, structure
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David Mamet
-scripts have rough, broken dialogue, lots of swears -focus on issues of masculinity and sexuality -playwright for -Race -Speed the Plough -Glengarry Glen Ross
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Tony Kushner
-playwright for Angels in America -contemporary masterpiece -deals with AIDS -his work has "explosive humor"
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David Henry Hwang
plays with sexuality and cultural tensions (between East and West) -playwright for M. Butterfly
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Neil LaBute
prolific playwright -playwright for -Reasons to be Pretty -Fat Pig
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Lynn Nottage
focus on human rights, african american women, prostitution, genital castration. -playwright for "Ruined"
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Dialogue
sometimes composed in text -the speeches---delivered to one another of the characters in a play -contrast with monologue -has 3 levels: -1st level= saying what you mean -2nd level= having subtext/something underneath dialogue -saying one thing and perhaps meaning another
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conflict
within internal character, institution or external
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structure
conscious or subconscious, move chronologically or episodically
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conventions of melodrama
-musical score -almost always a theme song you identify with protagonist -simple, powerful stories -set pattern of action -stereotypes -example= damsel in distress (female), hero (male), bad guy/villain (male)
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realism
-general principle that the stage should portray, in a reasonable facsimile, ordinary people in ordinary circumstances and that actors should behave, as much as possible, as real people do in real life -most pervasive influence on contemporary theatre -Darwin used in terms of heredity -objective realization of life ('scientific method', expose social ills) -launched with plays of Henrik Ibsen, 1879 -Antone Chekov-his plays offered deeply complex characters
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naturalism
-a version of realism advancing the notion that the natural and social environment more than individual willpower, controlled human behavior -in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, proponents sought to dispense with all theatrical convention in the search for "a slice of life" -attempted to destroy all dramatic convention -tries to create life itself on stage -example= Andre Antoine (direction of La Terre "The Earth") OR reality tv
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naturalism on stage
-through costumes, settings and decor realistically rendered -real materials (furniture from home used) -Zola is playwright, Antoine is director -everyday language, no lengthy exposition -natural staging, acting and diction -realistic characterizations and simple plot constructions
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stylization
to deliberately shape a play (or a setting, a costume, etc.) in a specifically non-naturalistic manner
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Emile Zola
1849-1902 -head of naturalist movement
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Henrik Ibsen
1828-1906 -questioned ideas/truths (he's unconventional) -skeptical of majority views -"Father of Realism" -playwright of A Doll's House
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Problem Plays
Plays that focus on general social concerns -example= A Doll's House -demonstrated a marriage in crisis -critiqued social conventions and inequalities -failed to offer reconciliation
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causal plot
secret that is gradually revealed to the audience
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symbolism
-emphasizes the symbolic nature of theatrical presentation and the abstract possibilities of drama -first major antirealistic movement in the arts and in theatre -broke into various submovements: expressionism, surrealism, theatricalism, and many others
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metatheatre
plays or theatrical acts that are self-consciously theatrical that refer back to the art of the theatre and call attention to their own theatricality
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ensemble
the group of actors (and sometimes directors and designers) who put a play together -metaphorically, the rapport and shared sense of purpose that bind such a group into a unified artistic entity
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expressionism
an artistic style that greatly exaggerates perceived reality in order to express inner truths directly -is notable for its gutsy dialogue, piercing sounds, bright lighting and coloring, bold scenery, and shocking, vivid imagery
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"Hero's Journey" plot structure
-old world order -exposition -inciting action -complication/resolution 1 -complication/resolution 2 -complication/crisis -climax -denouement -new world order
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Major Dramatic Question (MDQ)
main question of the plot, usually shown during the beginning of the play -will _____(protagonist) ______(action) _______(antagonist) in order to _____(action) for the purpose of ______(moral of story)?
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credibility and intrigue
-has to have something to draw us in -has to be structurally consistent (no contradictions)
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speakability
words of action that have maximum impact
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stageability
dialogue must be conceived as an integral element of a particular staged situation, in which setting, physical acting, and spoken dialogue are inextricably combined
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flow
requires a continual stream of information -a play that flows is one that is continually saying something, doing something and meaning something to the audience
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stage left
left, from the actor's point of view
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richness
-depth in language to create authority and make it compelling -qualities common to plays that leave us with this sense of satisfaction -richness of detail and dimension
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depth of characterization
-characters distinctness -requires that every character possess an independence of intention, expression, and motivation
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gravity
-a plays central theme is one of serious and lasting significance in humanity's spiritual, moral, or intellectual life -relevant to us today -idea that big ideas matter
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pertinence
refers to the play's touching on current audience concerns, both of-the-moment and timeless
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compression
refers to the playwright's skill in condensing a story (which may span many days, even years, of chronological time) -no play is more then 2 hours
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economy
-relates to an author's skill in eliminating or consolidating characters, events, locales, and words in the service of compression -most important moments are shown
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intensity
-one of the theatre's most powerful attributes -it conveys to the audience an undestroyable feeling that that moment in theatre is unique and its revelations are profound -find uniqueness in moments
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upstage
-proscenium theatre= the part of the stage farthest from the audience; the rear of the stage
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downstage
the part of the stage closest to the audience
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apron
-part of the stage located in front of the proscenium -the forwardmost portion of the stage
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drama
-the art of the theatre -plays, playmaking and the whole body of literature of and for the stage
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wings
-proscenium stage= vertical pieces of scenery to the left and right of the stage, usually parallel with the footlights
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Samuel Beckett
the unquestioned leader of the absurdist writers -avoided all realism, romanticism, and rationalism to create works that are relentlessly unenlightening -theatre was based on the thesis that man is and will remain ignorant regarding all matters of importance
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Eugene O'Neill
-began as a realistic playwright -wrote a play that became a landmark of expressionist theatre in 1921 -wrote 'The Hairy Ape' -used visual and auditory effects
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The Hairy Ape
-by Eugene O'Neill -a one-act play featuring eight scenes
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George Bernard Shaw
-created a comedic realism through which he addressed issues such as slum landlordism, prostitution, and urban poverty
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Luigi Pirandello
-'all the world's a stage' -contrasts the passionate story of the "characters" whose "drama" concerns a broken family, adultery, and a suggestion of incest--- with the artifice of the stage and its simulations -playwrights have use of paradox, irony and the theatre as a metaphor to create a whimsical drama about human identity and human destiny
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Six Characters in Search of An Author
expresses from its famous title onward a "meta-theatrical" motif by which the theatre itself becomes part of the content of play production
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Andre Antoine
-created Theatre Libre to encourage stagings of realistic dramas
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Anton Chekhov
-achieved success as a playwright through a set of plays that portray the end of the tsarist era -created deeply complex relationships among his characters and to develop his plots and themes more or less between the lines
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theatre of cruelty
-notion of theatre developed by French theorist Antonin Artaud -goal was to employ language more for its sound than for its meaning and to create a shocking stream of sensations rather than a coherent plot and cast of characters
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theatre of the absurd
-to describe plays with unrealistic and illogical plots, repetitious and disconnected language, and unclear themes, relfecting a world in which humans "absurdly" seek meaning but never find it -theatrical style named by Martin Esslin -the term derived by essay by Albert Camus
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