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Monologus

A monologue is a speech given by a single character to express their thoughts or feelings. It can be used to provide backstory, build anticipation, or reveal a character's inner thoughts. There are several types of monologues including soliloquies where a character speaks their thoughts aloud without others present, dramatic monologues directly addressing others, and internal monologues allowing the audience to hear a character's thoughts. Monologues are commonly used in plays, films, television and literature to develop characters and advance the plot. Examples from works like Hamlet, The Walking Dead, and A Christmas Story are provided to illustrate different types of monologues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
114 views6 pages

Monologus

A monologue is a speech given by a single character to express their thoughts or feelings. It can be used to provide backstory, build anticipation, or reveal a character's inner thoughts. There are several types of monologues including soliloquies where a character speaks their thoughts aloud without others present, dramatic monologues directly addressing others, and internal monologues allowing the audience to hear a character's thoughts. Monologues are commonly used in plays, films, television and literature to develop characters and advance the plot. Examples from works like Hamlet, The Walking Dead, and A Christmas Story are provided to illustrate different types of monologues.

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I. What is a Monologue?

A monologue is a speech given by a single character in a story. In drama, it is


the vocalization of a character’s thoughts; in literature, the verbalization. It
is traditionally a device used in theater—a speech to be given on stage—but
nowadays, its use extends to film and television.
 

II. Example of a Monologue


A monologue speaks at people, not with people. Many plays and shows
involving performers begin with a single character giving a monologue to the
audience before the plot or action begins. For example, envision a ringleader
at a circus…
Example 1
Ladies and Gentleman, Boys and Girls!
Tonight, your faces will glow with wonder
As you witness some of the greatest acts ever seen in the ring!
Beauties and beasts, giants and men, dancers and daredevils
Will perform before your very eyes
Some of the most bold and wondrous stunts
You’ve yet beheld!
Watch, now,
As they face fire and water,
Depths and heights,
Danger and fear…

The ringleader’s speech is directed to the audience. His monologue helps him
build anticipation and excitement in his viewers while he foreshadows some
of the thrills the performance will contain.

Example 2
A monologue doesn’t have to be at the start or end of a play, show, or movie
—on the contrary, they occur all of the time. Imagine a TV series about a
group of young friends, and on this episode, one friend has been being a
bully. The group is telling jokes about some of the things the bully has done
to other kids at school, when one girl interrupts everyone…

You know, I don’t think what you are doing is funny. In fact, I think it is sad. You think you’re
cool because you grew faster than some people, and now you can beat them up? What is cool
about hurting people? We are all here pretending that you’re a leader, when really, I know that
you’re nothing but a mean bully! All this time I’ve been scared to say that, but just now, I
realized that I’m not afraid of bullies—so, I won’t be afraid of you!
When a conversation stops and shifts focus to a single character’s speech, it
is usually a sign of a monologue. In this situation, a group conversation
between friends turns into one girl’s response; a monologue addressing
bullying and the bully himself.

III. Types of Monologues

A. Soliloquy
A speech that a character gives to himself—as if no one else is listening—
which voices his inner thoughts aloud. Basically, a soliloquy captures a
character talking to himself at length out loud. Of course, the audience (and
sometimes other characters) can hear the speech, but the person talking to
himself is unaware of others listening. For example, in comedy, oftentimes a
character is pictured giving themselves a lengthy, uplifting speech in the
mirror…while a friend is secretly watching them and laughing.
The soliloquy is one of the most fundamental dramatic devices used by
Shakespeare in his dramas. 

B. Dramatic Monologue
A speech that is given directly to the audience or another character. It can be
formal or informal, funny or serious; but it is almost always significant in
both length and purpose. For example, a scene that captures a president’s
speech to a crowd exhibits a dramatic monologue that is both lengthy and
important to the story’s plotline. In fact, in TV, theater ,and film, all speeches
given by a single character—to an audience, the audience, or even just one
character—are dramatic monologues.

C. Internal Monologue
The expression of a character’s thoughts so that the audience can witness (or
read, in literature) what is going on inside that character’s mind. It is
sometimes (depending on the style in) referred to as “stream-of-
consciousness.” In a piece of writing, internal monologues can often be easily
identified by italicized blocks of text that express a character’s inner
thoughts. On TV and in films, internal monologues are usually spoken in the
character’s voice, but without seeing him actually speak; thus giving the
feeling of being able to hear his thoughts.
 

IV. Importance of Monologues


Monologues give the audience and other characters access to what a
particular character is thinking, either through a speech or the vocalization of
their thoughts. While the purpose of a speech is obvious, the latter is
particularly useful for characterization: it aids the audience in developing an
idea about what the character is really thinking, which in turn helps (or can
later help) explain their previous (or future) actions and behavior.
 

V. Examples of Monologue in Literature


Example 1
As a technique principally used on the stage (or screen), the best examples
of monologues in literature are found in dramatic literature, most notably in
Shakespeare’s dramas. Below is selection of arguably the most famous
monologue in literature—soliloquy, specifically—from Act III Scene I of the
tragedy Hamlet. This soliloquy begins with the well-known words “To be, or
not to be- that is the question:”
 

HAMLET

To be, or not to be- that is the question:

Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer

The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune

Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,


And by opposing end them. To die- to sleep-

No more; and by a sleep to say we end

The heartache, and the thousand natural shocks

That flesh is heir to. ‘Tis a consummation

Devoutly to be wish’d. To die- to sleep.

To sleep- perchance to dream: ay, there’s the rub!

For in that sleep of death what dreams may come

When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,

Must give us pause. There’s the respect

That makes calamity of so long life.


This scene reveals to the audience that Hamlet is contemplating suicide. His
words express an internal thought process that we would normally not be
able to witness. The only reason that Shakespeare has Hamlet speak these
words out loud is so that the audience—not anyone else in the play—can
hear them. He uses a soliloquy to share Hamlet’s unstable state of mind and
disquieting thoughts.

Example 2
In Mark Twain’s short story “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras
County,” the narrator is sent to find a man named Simon Wheeler, who will
tell him a story. After the narrator introduces the premise, he explains that
he let Wheeler “go on in his own way, and never interrupted him once.” He
follows with Wheeler’s story, told in Wheeler’s voice, which he achieves
through the shift in the style of speech. Below is a small piece of the story:
There was a feller here once by the name of  Jim  Smiley, in the winter of ’49
—or may be it was the spring of ’50—I don’t recollect exactly, somehow,
though what makes me think it was one or the other is because I remember
the big flume wasn’t finished when he first came to the camp; but any way
he was the curiosest man about always betting on any thing that turned up
you ever see, if he could get anybody to bet on the other side; and if he
couldn’t, he’d change sides. Any way that suited the other man would suit
him—any way just so’s he got a bet,  he  was satisfied. But still he was lucky,
uncommon lucky; he most always come out winner.
Mark Twain was a literary genius when it came to storytelling—he could
make the page seem like a stage with the way he used spelling and grammar
to bring a character’s accent and personality to life. Wheeler’s story is
a dramatic monologue, which Twain used to achieve the feeling of a real
storytelling exchange between two people. His employment of this dramatic
technique in this short story makes the readers feel like they are hearing
Wheeler’s story firsthand.
 

VI. Examples of Monologue in Pop Culture


Example 1

Oftentimes, a conversation occurs between characters and then shifts to one


character giving a significant speech. This is a popular way of inserting a
monologue into a scene. In this scene from Season 5 Episode 10 of the TV
horror The Walking Dead, the group is talking around the campfire:
 

Every day he woke up and told himself, ‘Rest in peace; now get up and go to
war,’” says Rick. “After a few years of pretending he was dead, he made it
out alive. That’s the trick of it, I think. We do what we need to do, and then
we get to live. No matter what we find in D.C., I know we’ll be okay. This is
how we survive: We tell ourselves that we are the walking dead.

-Rick Grimes

Here, Rick’s monologue begins when the dialogue ceases to be a group


discussion. Now he alone is speaking to the group—he is giving a dramatic
monologue.
Example 2
In one of the most popular Christmas movies to date, A Christmas Story,
the protagonist Ralphie is also the narrator. However, the narration is
internal: Ralphie isn’t speaking directly to us, but he is openly letting us in on
his thoughts.
Soap | A Christmas Story | TBS
As you’ve now heard in this clip, Ralphie’s voice is that of an adult man, and
that’s why the narration style in this film is unique—adult Ralphie is
simultaneously reflecting on the past and reenacting present-Ralphie’s
thoughts. The mental debate he has about who taught him the curse word
and what to tell his mother is an internal monologue: we can hear his thoughts;
thus the situation is funnier and more thought provoking.
 

VIII. Related Terms

Aside
An aside is when a character briefly pauses to speak directly to the audience,
but no other characters are aware of it. It is very similar to a monologue;
however, the primary difference between the two is that an aside is very short;
it can be just one word, or a couple of sentences, but it is always brief—
monologues are substantial in length. Furthermore, an aside is always
said directly to the audience, usually accomplished (in film and television) by
looking directly into the camera. As an example, asides are a key part of the
style of the Netflix series House of Cards; the main character Francis
Underwood often looks directly into the camera and openly addresses the
audience as if they are present, while the other characters do not know that
the audience exists.

Dialogue
While a monologue is a given by one character (“mono”=single), a dialogue is
a conversation that occurs between two or more characters. Monologues and
dialogues are similar in that they both deliver language to the audience. For
instance, in a movie, a race winner’s speech is a monologue, however, a
speech collectively given by several members of a team is dialogue. Both
techniques can address the audience, but the difference lies in how many
people are speaking.
 

Conclusion
In conclusion, monologues (and dialogues) are arguably the most
fundamental parts of onstage drama and dramatic literature. Without them,
essentially only silent film and theater could exist, as monologues provide
the only way for the audience to witness a character’s thoughts.

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