See also: fourth-wall

English

edit
 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

A reference to the three walls of a box set, with the fourth wall being the imaginary wall separating the performers from the audience. Coined by philosopher and art critic Denis Didérot in 1758[1] and thus a calque of French quatrième mur.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

fourth wall (plural fourth walls)

  1. (performing arts, idiomatic) The imaginary invisible wall at the front of the stage in a proscenium theatre, through which the audience sees the action in the world of the play.
    • 1916 February 20, “Second Thoughts on First Nights”, in New York Times, page X7:
      This is a flat, unnecessary, and strangely disturbing denial of the fourth-wall convention, that unwritten agreement between playwright and playgoer whereby you think of yourself at the theatre as a privileged, exonerated, comfortably seated eavesdropper.
    • 2005 August 31, Philip Kennicott, “Our Aura of Security, Shattered Like Glass”, in Washington Post, page C01:
      There's been a convention in the theater world to think of the division between audience and spectacle as a fourth wall, a wall that the playwright tries to eliminate through the force of his drama.
  2. (by extension) The boundary between the fiction and the audience.
    • 1999, Orson Scott Card, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
      Even though you, the author, may be maintaining a fourth wall between your characters and your readers, he, the narrator, is not keeping that fourth wall between himself and the audience he thinks he's telling the story to.
    • 2003, Robert Keith Sawyer, Improvised Dialogues: Emergence and Creativity in Conversation, page 107:
      The fourth wall is the imaginary barrier between the stage and the audience, and the phrase is a metaphor for the dramatic frame.
    • 2003, Cathy Haase, Acting for Film, page 92:
      As actors, we are still looking out into the imaginary fourth wall. The difference is that in film, the fourth wall is no longer fixed;
    • 2004, Diana Fuss, The Sense of an Interior: Four Writers and the Rooms that Shaped Them, page 207:
      ... removes the fourth wall of the nineteenth-century novel and, in doing so, eliminates the border between a fictional inside and a nonfictional outside.
    • 2005, Chris Crawford, Chris Crawford on Interactive Storytelling, page 208:
      I've saved the worst for last. The crudest scheme is to drop the fourth wall and advise players as to actions that are inhibiting

Derived terms

edit

Translations

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ J A Cuddon (2012) Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN