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CHARACTERS. The actors in a story's plotPeople, animals, robots, or whatever the writer choosesMay be more than one main character, particularly in a book. Protagonist ? main character(s)Antagonist ? person(s) or force(s) in conflict with the main characterLittle Red Riding Hood ? Who is the pr
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1. Introduction to the Elements of Fiction
2. CHARACTERS The actors in a story’s plot
People, animals, robots, or whatever the writer chooses
May be more than one main character, particularly in a book.
Protagonist – main character(s)
Antagonist – person(s) or force(s) in conflict with the main character
Little Red Riding Hood – Who is the protagonist? Who is the antagonist?
3. SETTING Time and place in which a story happens
Physical surroundings
Ideas
Customs, Values, and Beliefs that are associated with the broad setting
Little Red Riding Hood – What is the setting of this fairy tale?
Think about the setting broadly, then identify more specific locations.
4. PLOT Sequence of events in a story – action that moves the story along
Exposition – introduces the story’s characters, setting, and conflict
Rising action – develops the conflict with complications and suspense
Climax – the emotional high point of the story
Falling action – shows what happens to the characters after the climax
Resolution – shows how the conflict is resolved or how the problem is solved
Little Red Riding Hood – What is the sequence of events in Little Red Riding Hood’s story?
5. CONFLICT The element of the story which shows the concerns of the central characters.
Conflict is a struggle between opposing forces
External conflict: struggle between a character and an outside force (another character, society, nature, or fate)
Internal conflict: struggle within a character against opposing feelings or indecision
Little Red Riding Hood - What conflict does Little Red Riding Hood face?
What was the solution, or resolution?
6. POINT OF VIEW Who is telling the story?
Narrator’s standpoint or perspective
First-person point of view: narrator is a character in the story, uses I, me, we, us
Third-person point of view: narrator describes the story from outside
Objective – like a camera is recording the action
Omniscient – narrator knows thoughts and feelings of every character
Limited – narrator knows thoughts and feelings of only one character
Little Red Riding Hood – What is the P.O.V.?
7. THEME Central message of the story
Universal – applies to everyone, everywhere, at every time
Sometimes the theme is stated directly
Sometimes the theme is implied (not “right there”, more of an “on your own”)
Little Red Riding Hood – What is the theme?