1 / 24

6 Elements of Story Can you think of all 6?

6 Elements of Story Can you think of all 6?. 1. THEME - can be considered in 4 ways. Lesson - the learning that comes from a story that is generated by a particular reader for that reader.

mikkel
Download Presentation

6 Elements of Story Can you think of all 6?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 6 Elements of StoryCan you think of all 6?

  2. 1. THEME - can be considered in 4 ways • Lesson - the learning that comes from a story that is generated by a particular reader for that reader. • (eg. Cinderella - what happens at midnight could be seen as teaching about the anxiety that is in the back of everyone's mind as they struggle to feel and be authentic)

  3. b) Thesis - the central learning that an author wants the reader to obtain from the story. • Eg. All The King's Men by Robert Penn Warren - tries to teach in various ways that all men are weak and even if they become powerful they will become corrupt)

  4. c) Big Ideas - these are the universal ideas that the story addresses throughout the narrative and explores in varied ways • Eg. All of Jane Austen's novels explore what it means to be an adult, sacrifice, love among other big ideas.)

  5. d) Moral - the teaching from the story is stated explicitly in the story • eg. The fable The Tortoise and the Hare states that "slow and steady wins the race")

  6. 2. CONFLICT – can be considered in two ways a) problem and its resolution

  7. 2. CONFLICT – can be considered in two ways a) problem and its resolution b)kinds of conflict - person v. - person v. - person v. - person v. - person v.

  8. CONFLICT cont. b) kinds of conflict - person v.person - person v. self - person v. nature - person v.technology (machine, computers) - person v. society (community, civilization, war, religion, government)

  9. 2. CHARACTERS - can be looked at in 2 ways • a) Main types

  10. CHARACTER cont. • Main types Protagonist: the central character that is changed by events or people in the story

  11. CHARACTER cont. • Main types Protagonist: the central character that is changed by events or people in the story - Antagonist: the characters that have an effect on the protagonist – work against the protagonist

  12. CHARACTER cont. b) Pairs of sub-types: - round/flat - fully developed and described through description or their actions v. undeveloped

  13. b) Pairs of sub-types: - round/flat - fully developed and described through description or their actions v. undeveloped - realistic/stock or stereotype - everyday characters that are natural v. standard types that are in many stories

  14. b) Pairs of sub-types: - round/flat - fully developed and described through description or their actions v. undeveloped - realistic/stock or stereotype - everyday characters that are natural v. standard types that are in many stories - dynamic/static - changed by events v. unchanged by the course of the story

  15. 4. PLOT – has 5 parts A) INTRODUCTION -

  16. 4. PLOT – has 5 parts • INTRODUCTION • RISING ACTION

  17. PLOT cont. • INTRODUCTION • RISING ACTION • CLIMAX

  18. PLOT cont. • INTRODUCTION • RISING ACTION • CLIMAX D) FALLING ACTION

  19. PLOT cont. • INTRODUCTION • RISING ACTION • CLIMAX D) FALLING ACTION E) CONCLUSION

  20. 5. SETTING – involves 2 parts A) Place: Where the events are taking place (building, town, province, country, planet)

  21. SETTING – involves 2 parts A) Place: Where the events are taking place (building, town, province, country, planet) B) Time: Era, season, time of day

  22. 6. GENRE / STYLE – considered in 3 ways • Type of Story: romance, sci-fi, etc

  23. GENRE/ STYLE cont. A) Type of Story: romance, sci-fi, etc B) Kind of Writing: novel, novella, short story, play, screenplay

  24. GENRE/ STYLE cont. A) Type of Story: romance, sci-fi, etc B) Kind of Writing: novel, novella, short story, play, screenplay C) Language used – slang, etc. that is mostly demonstrated in dialogue of the characters. Can be used to set tone of writing

More Related