Key Figures in Theatre and Film
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Questions and Answers

What is one role that students primarily explore in the process-concept structure approach to drama?

  • Spectator
  • Player (correct)
  • Director
  • Critic
  • Which of the following is NOT listed as a basic drama skill?

  • Relating to the audience (correct)
  • Emotions for expression
  • Concentration
  • Control of the body
  • What is the essence of collage in visual arts?

  • Making marks on surfaces in public spaces
  • Using digital techniques for visuals
  • Assembling different forms to create a new whole (correct)
  • Cutting existing images to create new forms
  • Which artistic technique involves removing pieces from an image?

    <p>Decollage</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Which of the following best describes digital art?

    <p>Art that incorporates technology in its creation or presentation</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is a key component needed for creating art according to the suggested materials?

    <p>Lighting Equipment</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Which movement integrates landscape with the artwork itself?

    <p>Land Art</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What technique involves transforming ink from a prepared screen to create prints?

    <p>Print Making</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the primary difference between patrilineal and matrilineal descent?

    <p>Patrilineal descent is traced through the father's line, while matrilineal descent is traced through the mother's line.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Explain the concept of endogamy and provide an example of where it might occur.

    <p>Endogamy is the practice of marrying within a specific group, such as one's own village or community; for example, many religious groups often practice endogamy.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Describe the terms 'affinal kinship' and provide a context in which it is relevant.

    <p>Affinal kinship refers to relationships formed through marriage; it is relevant in understanding the alliances created between families during marriages.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What distinguishes polygyny from polyandry in the context of marital structures?

    <p>Polygyny involves a man having multiple wives, while polyandry involves a woman having multiple husbands.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What kind of marriage involves a reciprocal exchange of spouses between two groups?

    <p>Exchange marriage</p> Signup and view all the answers

    How do postmarital residency rules like neolocal, patrilocal, and matrilocal differ in terms of household formation?

    <p>Neolocal allows couples to establish an independent household, patrilocal requires them to live with the husband's relatives, and matrilocal means living with the wife’s relatives.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    How does bilocal residence affect newlywed couples?

    <p>They alternately stay with the husband's and wife's relatives.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Describe the difference between child marriage and modern arranged marriage.

    <p>Child marriage is arranged before the child reaches maturity, while modern arranged marriage involves the child's consent in choosing from possible mates.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the role of compadrazgo in familial relationships?

    <p>Compadrazgo creates co-parenthood bonds through rituals like baptism and confirmation.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What distinguishes a blended family from a nuclear family?

    <p>A blended family comprises parents with children from previous relationships, unlike a nuclear family, which consists solely of a married couple and their children.</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Study Notes

    Key Figures in Theatre and Film

    • Amel Yanson Leonardia is a renowned theatre director and was recognized as an "Outstanding Sillimanian for Theater Arts."
    • He delivered a lecture on "The Arts of Theater Directing" as part of the Albert Faurot Lecture Series for Culture and the Arts.
    • Frances Makil Ignacio is a renowned actress in theatre, television, and film.
    • She began performing at the age of 4 and studied ballet with the Silliman University Junior Dance Troupe until she was 8.

    Process-Concept Structure Approach to Drama (Geraldine B. Siks)

    • This approach emphasizes the fundamental roles of Player, Playmaker, and Audience within drama.
    • Players are students who primarily explore concepts through various activities like:
      • Relaxation
      • Body Movement
      • Sensory Awareness (sight)
      • Imagination and Improvisation
    • Basic Drama Skills:
      • Concentration
      • Relaxation
      • Control of the Body
      • Emotional Expression through Improvised Action and Speech
    • Suggested Materials:
      • Space
      • Lighting Equipment (optional)
      • Costume Materials
      • Sound Exploration Materials

    Artistic Skills and Techniques

    • Collage: Assembling different forms of materials to create a new whole.
    • Décollage: The opposite of collage, where parts of an existing image are removed or altered to create a new image.
    • Graffiti: Illicit writing or drawings on walls or surfaces often in public spaces.
    • Land Art: Art movement where the landscape and artwork are interconnected.
    • Digital Art: Artistic work or practice incorporating digital technology in the creative or presentation process.
    • Mixed Media: Art created using more than one medium.
    • Printmaking: Process of creating artwork by transferring ink from a matrix or screen onto paper or material.

    Kinship

    • Kinship is the social institution that refers to relations formed between members of society.
    • There are two main types of kinship: consanguineal and affinal.

    Consanguineal Kinship

    • Based on biological relations through birth or blood affinity.
    • Examples include parents and children, siblings, nieces/nephews, aunts/uncles.
    • Descent refers to biological relationships such as ancestry, offspring, and children.
    • Lineage refers to the line where one's descent is traced.

    Unilineal Descent

    • Descent is traced through a single ancestor, either male or female.
    • Patrilineal Descent: both males and females belong to the kin group of their father. Only males pass on their family identity to their children.
    • Matrilineal Descent: descent is traced through the female line.
    • Bilateral Descent: descent is traced through both parents' ancestors.

    Affinal Kinship

    • Formed through marriage alliances.

    Marriage

    • A social institution where two individuals, a man and a woman, enter into family life.
    • Partners make a public, official, and permanent declaration of their union as lifetime couples.

    Forms of Marriage

    • Monogamy: both married partners have only one spouse or sexual partner.
    • Polygamy: one individual has multiple spouses or sexual mates.
      • Polygyny: a man has multiple female partners/mates.
      • Polyandry: a woman has multiple male partners/mates.
    • Endogamy: compulsory marriage within one's own village, community, ethnic, social, or religious group.
    • Exogamy or out-marriage: marriage custom requiring individuals to marry outside of their own group, community, or social classes.

    Postmarital Residency Rules

    • Neolocal: independent from the place of residence of the newlywed's parents.
    • Patrilocal: married couples stay in the house of the husband's relatives or near the husband's kin.
    • Matrilocal: couples live with the wife's relatives or near the wife's kin.
    • Bilocal: newlywed couples stay with the husband's relatives and the wife's kin alternately.

    Referred and Arranged Marriages

    • Referred Marriage: happens through the help of a matchmaker.
    • Arranged Marriages: also known as fixed marriage, where parents, community leaders, or religious officials determine the marital partner.

    Types of Arranged Marriages

    • Child Marriage: parents arrange for the marriage of their child long before the marriage takes place.
    • Exchange Marriage: reciprocal exchange of spouses between two countries, tribes, or groups.
    • Diplomatic Marriage: arranged marriage between two royal or political families to forge political or diplomatic alliances.
    • Modern Arranged Marriage: the child's parents, with the child’s consent, choose from several possible mates.

    Kinship by Rituals

    • Compadrazgo "godparenthood": ritualized form of forging co-parenthood or family, done through Catholic rituals like baptism, confirmation, and marriage.
      • Compadre/kumpare: male godparent.
      • Kumare: female godparent.

    The Family & The Household

    • The family is the basic unit of social organization.
    • Made up of a group of individuals linked together by marriage, blood relations, or adoption.

    Forms of Families

    • Nuclear Family: a married couple and their biological or adopted child/children.
    • Extended Family: members go beyond the nuclear family, including parents, offspring, and other relatives.
    • Blended Family: parents have children from previous marital relationships, but all members form a new family unit. Also known as a step family or reconstituted family.

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    Description

    This quiz explores the contributions of significant figures in theatre and film, such as Amel Yanson Leonardia and Frances Makil Ignacio. It also examines the Process-Concept Structure Approach to Drama, highlighting the roles of Players, Playmakers, and the Audience. Engage with drama skills and the foundational concepts of directing and performance.

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