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Character. Person or animal who takes part in the action of a literary work. Types of Characters. Protagonist: main character Antagonist: opposes the main character
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Character Person or animal who takes part in the action of a literary work
Types of Characters • Protagonist: main character • Antagonist: opposes the main character • Foil: A character who provides a strong contrast to another character, usually the main character. It calls attention to the strengths or weaknesses of the character
Types of Characters • Static: character whose values, morals, opinions remain the same throughout the story • Dynamic: undergo a major change in values, morals, opinions during the story
Types of Characters • Round: are convincing, true to life, have many different and possibly contradictory personality traits. • Flat: are stereotyped, shallow, and often symbolic, and have only one or two traits
Characterization • Direct: the narrator states something about a character • Jill is smart. Bob is tall. • Indirect: author reveals information about a character that requires us to make a judgment • Jill is our valedictorian. • Bob hit is head on the door frame.
Methods of indirect characterization • What the character thinks or how he/she feels • What the character does: his or her actions • What the character says • How other characters react to him or her • How the character looks
What are you looking for? • Traits: a special quality or something about someone’s personality • Motivation: what causes someone to act in a certain way • Conflict: when characters have different motivation or goals
What are you looking for? • Point of View: the side from which a story is told. • Relationships: the connection of people in friendship, family, work, school, or other activities