A Introduction
Before starting to have a closer look at the dramatic structure of the book "Death of a Sales- man" by Arthur Miller, the general meaning of the word "drama" has to be defined.
A drama is a work of literature or a composition which delineates life and human activity by means of presenting various actions of, and dialogues between, a group of characters. The drama has a purifying effect on the spectators who shall identify themselves with the charac- ters and then undergo the same experience. Drama is furthermore designed for theatrical pre- sentation, that is, although we speak of a drama as a literary work or a composition, we must never forget that drama is designed to be acted on stage. Even when we read a play we have no real grasp of what that play is like unless we at least attempt to imagine how actors on a stage would present the material. Finally, drama is more than the representation of life and character through action and dialogue, for drama is also entertainment.
Greece is the birthplace of the drama. The protagonist shall either have a problem with him- self, a problem with another person, the antagonist, or he shall have a problem with society. By writing a drama, the author always has to follow three rules: The first rule deals with the unity of action, that means that only one problem shall be dealt with. The second rule includes the unity of place, all the action shall take place only in one setting. The unity of time forms the third rule, all action shall take place only in 24 hours.
Ancient drama consists of five acts: The first act is always an exposition, the setting (place and time), the characters and the problem are introduced here. Rising action is the second part of the play in which the forces creating conflict are delineated, enlarged, and prepared for some disaster. The first major pause in the play occurs when the hero makes a decision or makes some all-important discovery about either himself or someone else in the play. This third act, the act which interrupts everything else that is happening, is always referred to as the climax. The fourth act, the falling action, follows the climax and usually presents the ways in which the hero is slowly overpowered and becomes increasingly helpless. The fifth act always includes a denouement. Either a final solution, a kind of happy-end, can be found or a catastrophe breaks out, caused by the protagonist's failure in life or his death. The catas-trophe is the one event in the play toward which everything else has been working, either di-rectly or indirectly. Although the catastrophe is depressing and usually unpleasant, it satisfies because it fulfils the audience's expectations.