Dramaturgy is the study ofdramatic composition and therepresentation of the main elements of drama on the stage.
The term first appears in the eponymous workHamburg Dramaturgy (1767–69) byGotthold Ephraim Lessing. Lessing composed this collection of essays on the principles of drama while working as the world's firstdramaturge at theHamburg National Theatre ofAbel Seyler. Dramaturgy is distinct from play writing and directing, although the three may be practiced by one individual.[1] Somedramatists combine writing and dramaturgy when creating a drama. Others work with a specialist, called adramaturge, to adapt a work for the stage.
Dramaturgy may also be broadly defined as "adapting a story to actable form." Dramaturgy gives a performance work foundation andstructure. Often the dramaturge's strategy is to manipulate a narrative to reflect the currentZeitgeist through cross-cultural signs, theater- and film-historical references to genre, ideology, questions of gender and racial representation, etc., in the dramatization.
Dramaturgy as a practice-based as well as practice-led discipline was invented byGotthold Ephraim Lessing, in the 18th century. The Theater of Hamburg engaged him for some years for a position today known as a "dramaturge". He was the first to occupy this role in European theater and described his task as that of a "dramatic judge" ("dramatischer Richter"), one who must assess the most compelling and appropriate means of staging a particular theatrical work.[2] From 1767 to 1770, Lessing published a series of critical commentaries,Hamburg Dramaturgy (Hamburgische Dramaturgie). These works analyzed, criticized and theorized the current state of German theater, making Lessing the father of modern dramaturgy.[3]
German playwrightGustav Freytag attempted to synthesize the components of modern dramaturgy in his 1863 bookThe Technique of the Drama,[8] published in English in 1894. Known for its outline of the principles ofdramatic structure, including the arc of dramatic tension and resolution referred to asFreytag's Pyramid,The Technique of the Drama is often considered the blueprint for the first Hollywood screenwriting manuals.The Technique of Play Writing (1915) byCharlton Andrews,[9] refers to European and German traditions of dramaturgy and understanding dramatic composition.
A foundational work in the Western theatrical tradition isPoetics byAristotle (written c. 335 BCE), which analyzes the genre oftragedy. Aristotle considersOedipus Rex (c. 429 BCE) as the quintessential dramatic work. He analyzes the relations amongcharacter, action, and speech, gives examples of good plots, and considers the role of audience response as an aspect of theatrical form. His "rules" are referred to today as "Aristotelian drama". InPoetics, Aristotle discusses many key concepts of Greek drama, including the moment of tragic recognition (anagnorisis) and the purgation of audience feelings of pity and fear (catharsis).
Perhaps the most significant successor to Aristotelian dramaturgy is theEpic theatre developed by the twentieth century German playwrightBertolt Brecht. Many of the innovations associated with Brecht as a theorist and writer for the stage, including the concept of the "estrangement effect" (orVerfremdungseffekt) and the acting technique known asgestus, were intended as deliberate revisions of the values upheld by Aristotle.[10]
Poetics is the earliest survivingWestern work ofdramatic theory. The earliest non-Western dramaturgic work is probably theSanskrit workNatya Shastra (The Art of Theatre), written around500 BCE to 500 CE, which describes the elements, forms, and narrative elements of the ten major types of ancient Indian drama.[11]
Dramaturgy is a comprehensive exploration of the context in which the play resides. The dramaturge is tasked to obtain expertise on: the physical, social, political, and economic environment in which the action takes place; the psychological underpinnings of the characters; the various metaphorical expressions in the play of thematic concerns; as well as the technical consideration of the play as a piece of writing (structure, rhythm, flow, and even individual word choices).[12]
Institutional dramaturges may participate in many phases of play production including: casting of the play; offering in-house criticism of productions-in-progress; and informing the director, the cast, and the audience about a play’s history and its current importance. In America, this type of dramaturgy is sometimes known as Production Dramaturgy.[13] Institutional or production dramaturges may make files of materials about a play's history or social context, prepare program notes, lead post-production discussions, or write study guides for schools and groups. These actions can assist a director in integrating textual and acting criticism, performance theory, and historical research into a production before it opens.[14]
In the early 21st century, the field of dramaturgy has been enriched by the emergence ofdrametrics, a quantitative approach introduced by dramaturg and theatre scholar, Magda Romanska in 2014.[15] Drametrics, or computational dramaturgy, applies mathematical and computational methods to analyze dramatic texts, combining traditional dramaturgical analysis with digital humanities techniques. This methodology allows dramaturgs to discover structural patterns, character relationships, and dramatic rhythms through computational tools like configuration matrices and network analysis.[16] While traditional dramaturgy relies on close reading and interpretation, drametrics complements this approach by revealing patterns and structures that might not be apparent through conventional analysis, particularly when examining large bodies of dramatic work or comparing multiple texts systematically.[17]
Since dramaturgy is defined in a general way and the function of a dramaturge may vary from production to production, the copyright issues regarding it in the United States have very vague borders.
In 1996, there was debate on the question of the extent to which a dramaturge can claim ownership of a production, as in the case involving the estate ofJonathan Larson, author of the musicalRent and Lynn Thomson, the dramaturge on the production. Thomson claimed that she was a co-author of the work and that she never assigned, licensed or otherwise transferred her rights. She asked that the court declare her a co-author ofRent and grant her 16 per cent of the author's share of the royalties. Although she made her claim only after the show became aBroadway hit, the case is not without precedent. For instance, 15 per cent of the royalties ofAngels in America go to playwrightTony Kushner's dramaturge. On June 19, 1998, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the original court's ruling that Thomson was not entitled to be credited with co-authorship ofRent and that she was not entitled to royalties.[18] The case was ultimately settled out of court with Thomson receiving an undisclosed sum after she threatened to remove her material from the production.
^Lessing, G. E. (1766).Laokoon. Berlin: C. F. Vosst.
^Hegel, G. W. F.; Knox, T. M. (1835–38).Aesthetics : lectures on fine art (1975 ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
^Hammer, K., ed. (1968).Dramaturgische Schriften des 18. Jahrhunderts (in German). Berlin: Henschelverlag Berlin.
^Hammer, K., ed. (1987).Dramaturgische Schriften des 19. Jahrhunderts (in German). Berlin: Henschel Verlag.
^Freytag, Gustav.Technique of the drama: an exposition of dramatic composition and art. Translated by Elias J. MacEwan (translation of 6th German ed.). New York.
^Andrews, Charles (1915).The Technique of Play Writing. Springfield, Massachusetts: The Home Correspondence School.
^Eckersley, M. (1997).Soundings in the Dramaturgy of the Australian Theatre Director. Melbourne: University of Melbourne. p. 37.
^McCabe, Terry.Mis-Directing the Play: An Argument Against Contemporary Theatre. p. 64.
^Eckersley, M. (1997).Soundings in the Dramaturgy of the Australian Theatre Director. Melbourne: University of Melbourne. p. 9.
^Cardullo, Bert (2005).What is Dramaturgy?. New York: Peter Lang Publishing. p. 4.
^Romanska, M. (2014). "Drametrics: What Dramaturgs Should Learn From Mathematicians." InThe Routledge Companion to Dramaturgy. New York: Routledge, pp. 438–447.Available online
^Andresen, M. and Reiter, N. eds.(2024)Computational Drama Analysis: Reflecting on Methods and Interpretations. Berlin/Boston: DeGruyter.[1]
^Campos, L. (2020). "Mathematics and Dramaturgy in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries." InThe Palgrave Handbook of Literature and Mathematics, eds. R. Tubbs et al., 243-262.[2]
Castagno, Paul (May 1993). "Varieties of Monologic Strategy: the Dramaturgy of Len Jenkin and Mac Wellman".New Theatre Quarterly.9 (34):134–46.doi:10.1017/S0266464X00007727.S2CID193248105.
Castagno, Paul (March 1993). "Informing the New Dramaturgy: Critical Theory to Creative Process".Theatre Topics.3 (1):29–42.doi:10.1353/tt.2010.0065.S2CID144354169.
Castagno, Paul (2001).New Playwriting Strategies: A Language Based Approach to Playwriting. New York, London: Routledge.
Trencsényi, Katalin; Cochrane, Bernadette (2014).New Dramaturgy: International Perspectives on Theory and Practice. London: Bloomsbury.
Tuchmann, Kai (ed.) Postdramatic Dramaturgies - Resonances between Asia and Europe. transcript Verlag, Bielefeld 2022. ISBN 978-3-8376-5997-9