400 likes | 508 Views
Setting. Where and when a story takes place. Setting. Helps to: Provide background where char. lives Reveal information about characters Establish mood or atmosphere. Characters. protagonist. The main character in a story; the character you are rooting for. Antagonist.
E N D
Setting Where and when a story takes place
Setting Helps to: Provide background where char. lives Reveal information about characters Establish mood or atmosphere
protagonist The main character in a story; the character you are rooting for
Antagonist The character or force opposing the main character
Dynamic Character After Before A character who changes over the course of a story
Static character A character who remains the same over the course of a story
Flat character Has only one or two traits
Round CHaracter Has many different character traits
characterization How an author reveals the personality of a character in a story
Four types of characterization What a character himself says, thinks, does, feels Physical description of a character What other characters say, think, or feel Narrator’s direct comments “Jim and Della were foolish.”
plot The events that happen in a story
exposition Who, what, where, and when At the beginning of the story; provides background information about characters and setting
Exciting force The event that gets the action of the story going; the event that gets the story moving
Rising action The series of conflicts (struggles) that build the story to its climax
climax The high point, or turning point, in a story
Falling action Occurs after the climax; minor conflicts are solved.
Resolution A Royal The final outcome in a story; the end result
Plot Diagram Climax Falling Action Rising Action Resolution Exciting Force Exposition
Conflict A struggle (problem) between two forces
External conflict A character struggles with an outside force (nature, another character, society, etc.
Internal conflict A struggle with a character’s mind between needs, desires, or emotions
Types of conflict Man vs. man Man vs. society Man vs. nonhuman (nature, supernatural, beast, fate, etc.) Man vs. self
Point of view Perspective from which a writer tells the story
First Person P.O.V. The “I” narrator One of the characters is telling the story, using the pronoun “I”
Omniscient P.O.V. The “all-knowing” point of view The person telling the story knows everything there is to know about the characters: their thoughts, actions, problems, etc.
Limited Third Person P.O.V. The narrator, who plays no part in the story, zooms in on the thoughts and feelings of one character
The grass isn’t always greener on the other side THeme You can overcome your past A story’s message about life; The moral of a story Never underestimate your opponent Be careful what you wish for
Foreshadowing The use of clues to hint at events that will happen later in a story
flashback A scene that interrupts the present action to replay something that happened at an earlier time
Mood A story’s atmosphere or feeling it evokes
Symbol A person, place, thing, or idea that stands for itself as well as something beyond itself
Suspense Anxiety the reader feels about what is going to happen in a story
Dramatic irony Don’t open the door! When the audience knows something important that a character does not know
Verbal Irony “Wow, that outfit looks great on you.” When a writer or speaker says one thing but really means something completely different
Situational irony When there is a contradiction between what we expect to happen and what really does take place
Tone Serious Angry Sarcastic The attitude the writer takes toward a subject or character Humorous Sympathetic
Surprise ending Resolves a story’s conflicts in an unexpected way
Ambiguous ending An uncertain ending; an ending that can be interpreted in a number of different ways
Unreliable narrator May not always know the truth or may purposely choose to deceive us