Dramatic irony

/drəˈmætɪk ˈaɪrəni/ noun

Definition

A literary device where the audience knows information that characters in the story do not, creating tension, humor, or pathos through this knowledge gap. The audience can see the full implications of events while characters remain unaware.

Etymology

Combines 'dramatic' from Greek 'drama' (action) and 'irony' from Greek 'eironia' (dissimulation). The concept was formalized in literary criticism during the 18th century, though the technique was used extensively in Greek tragedy where audiences knew the mythological outcomes but characters did not.

Kelly Says

Dramatic irony turns audiences into gods—we watch characters make decisions with incomplete information while we see the bigger picture! Shakespeare mastered this technique: in Romeo and Juliet, we know Juliet isn't really dead, making Romeo's suicide both inevitable and heartbreaking. It's the reason horror movie audiences yell 'Don't go in there!'

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