430 likes | 1.58k Views
Introduction to the Short Story. CLE 3002.8.2 Understand the characteristics of various literary genres (e.g., poetry, novel, biography, short story, essay, drama). Definition: What is a short story?.
E N D
Introduction to the Short Story CLE 3002.8.2 Understand the characteristics of various literary genres (e.g., poetry, novel, biography, short story, essay, drama).
Definition: What is a short story? • A short story is a work of fiction that focuses on one important event in the lives of a small number of central characters and that can usually be read in one sitting.
Definition: What is a short story? • A short story is a work of fiction that focuses on one important event in the lives of a small number of central characters and that can usually be read in one sitting.
A short story has six basic elements: • Plot • Setting • Conflict • Character • Point of View • Theme
Plot = the framework of a story • Plot is the arrangement of related events that makes the story hang together. • Plot can also be referred to as the structure of a short story. Structure concerns how the story is told.
The plot or structure of a short story has four basic parts: • Exposition: introduces the characters, setting, and background situation of the story. • Exposition can also be called the Basic Situation of the story.
The plot or structure of a short story has four basic parts: • Complication: introduces complications and obstacles that increase the tension of the story conflict.
The plot or structure of a short story has four basic parts: • Climax: that moment in the story when tension rises to its highest point and the conflict comes to a head.
The plot or structure of a short story has four basic parts: • Resolution: describes how the conflict is finally resolved and the story comes to an end. • Resolution of conflict is also called the denouement of a story.
Conflict: the “story problem” that must be resolved. • also called the “overall conflict” or the “central conflict”
4 Kinds of Conflict • Man vs. Man • Man vs. Self • Man vs. Nature • Man vs. Society
External Internal External = a character struggles with a force outside himself or herself. Internal = a character struggles within his or her own mind with emotions, decisions, etc. 2 Types of Conflict
Characters “In the best stories, characters come alive. We care about their dreams, fears, and frustrations, just as if they were real people in our lives.”
Characters • Protagonist - ? • Protagonist – main character / clearly central to the story with all major events having some importance to him or her.
Characters • Antagonist - ? • Antagonist – any character who opposes or struggles against the protagonist. • Question: Does the antagonist always have to be a character (a person) in the story?
Main Major Minor Dynamic Static Flat Round Characters
Characterization: the process by which authors communicate their characters to the readers • Direct characterization • Indirect characterization
Point of View – the perspective from which a story is told • First Person Point of View – • Third Person Omniscient Point of View • Third Person Limited Point of View • Third Person Objective Point of View
First Person PoV Reader Narrator
Third Person Omniscient PoV Narrator Reader
Third Person Limited PoV Narrator Reader
Third Person Objective PoV Narrator Reader
Theme – the message the author intends to communicate by telling the story • Can there be more than one theme found in a short story? • A story’s themes are often universal truth’s, which are suggested by the specifics of a story.
Literary Elements used in short stories • Foreshadowing – ? • Foreshadowing – the use of clues that tell the reader what is going to happen as the story unfolds. • Foreshadowing is often used as a device by which the writer uses to arouse the reader’s interest and increase suspense.
Suspense • Suspense - ? • Suspense – the uncertainty or anxiety that a reader feels about what is going to happen next in a story.
Suspense – a question? • Why do writers use suspense in short stories? • Answer: to hold the reader’s interest