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Freytags

Freytags most commonly refers to the dramaturgical contributions of German writer Gustav Freytag and the term Freytag's Pyramid, a five-part model of dramatic structure introduced in his analysis Die Technik des Dramas (The Technique of Drama). The framework aims to describe the typical arc of action in tragedy and has since been generalized to prose and film.

The five parts are Exposition, which introduces setting, characters, and background; Rising action, a sequence of

Usage and critique: Freytag's Pyramid is widely taught as a framework for plotting in literary analysis, screenwriting,

Other contributions: Beyond the pyramid, Freytag was a prominent 19th-century novelist and critic. His notable fiction

complications
that
increases
tension;
Climax,
the
turning
point
and
peak
of
intensity;
Falling
action,
events
that
unwind
the
conflict;
and
Catastrophe,
or
denouement,
the
resolution,
often
involving
disaster
in
tragedy
or
closure
in
other
genres.
and
education.
It
provides
a
simple
schematic
for
understanding
how
narratives
unfold.
Critics
note
that
it
can
be
overly
rigid
and
that
many
works—especially
modern
novels
and
films—blend
stages,
skip
the
catastrophe,
or
subvert
the
expected
arc.
Nevertheless,
the
model
remains
a
foundational
reference
in
discussions
of
narrative
structure.
includes
Soll
und
Haben,
and
Die
Technik
des
Dramas
continues
to
influence
studies
of
drama
theory.
The
term
Freytags
is
sometimes
used
to
refer
to
Freytag's
broader
analyses
of
dramatic
form
and
its
applications.