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The Story. Neoaristotelian analysis. Based on Aristotle’s work Ars Poetica Outlines how stories are put together. Stories contain six elements: Action Character Thought Diction Music Spectacle. Action – what happens. Starts with an exposition
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Neoaristotelian analysis • Based on Aristotle’s work Ars Poetica • Outlines how stories are put together
Stories contain six elements: • Action • Character • Thought • Diction • Music • Spectacle
Action – what happens • Starts with an exposition • What you need to know to understand what follows • Establishes an equilibrium or status quo • The problem • Something happens to upset the status quo • Everything in the story is aimed at solving the problem
Crisis • A point at which the protagonist thinks he/she knows enough about the problem to solve it • The solution is applied • It’s the wrong answer, creating a • Complication • An obstacle to solving the problem, either because the wrong solution made it worse, or something new is added • Any story longer than 15 seconds has multiple crises and complications
Climax – the ultimate crisis • The protagonist has finally learned enough about the problem through the crises and complications to solve the problem and applies that solution • Denouement • A final part of the action that may or not be necessary. It shows that the problem has been solved and there are no more problems – we’re back at an equilibrium.
Character • The agents that carry out the action • Two words are vital to story telling, and it the characters that do them • Want • Every character must want something, and every character wants something different. • E.g., the villain wants to take over the world, and the hero wants to prevent that
Conflict • Since every character wants something different, this creates conflict • Without conflict there is no story • The problem starts the conflict • The climax is the resolution of the problem, and thus ends the conflict • When the conflict is over, so’s the story
Thought • Why the story is being told • To affect the audience’s sense of what the world is and their role in the world • Can follow the rules of society • Can define the rules of society • Can create the rules of society
Diction / Music / Spectacle • How the story is told • Diction = the words used and how they’re said • Music = what we hear, including music and sound effects • Spectacle = what we see, including setting, lighting, costumes, make-up, relationships, angles, etc.
Humans aren’t really homo sapiens (wise man) but pan narrans(the story telling chimp)
Societies • Tribal • “This is the way we’ve always done it.” • Barbarian • Personal; heroes vs. villains • Civilized • Learn from mistakes and progress to higher levels