431 likes | 910 Views
Narrative. Personal and story writing. narrative. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj-eh5VFsg0. Narrative Writing. A Narrative is a STORY. Narrative ~ A fictional story you can make up all of the events. Personal Narrative ~ A TRUE story about an event that happened in your life.
E N D
Narrative Personal and story writing
narrative • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj-eh5VFsg0
Narrative Writing • A Narrative is a STORY. • Narrative ~ A fictional story you can make up all of the events. • Personal Narrative~ A TRUE story about an event that happened in your life.
Order • Beginning: • Introduce characters, place • Middle: • Events happen (Rising Action) • Use details • Keep the events progressing forward (No two pages on how the dude made a sandwich). • End: • Result (Falling Action)
Narrative Writing • Tell a fictional story. • Write the events in order. • Remember your plot diagrams. • You can do flashbacks. • Paragraphs can be any size. INDENT! • Still proper grammar, spelling and capitalization.
Dialogue • Indent for each new speaker. • Use quotation marks. • Use commas inside the quotation marks, then who said the words.
“Wow,” Jim said as he walked down the eerie hallway to his destination. “I can’t believe it!” “Hey, wait up!” Joe yelled, as he saw his friends shadow disappear around the corner. Blah, blah, blah, blah Blah, blah Blah, blah Blah, Blah,blah Blah, blah Blah, blah Blah, blah Blah, blah Blah. “Relax bro,” Jim retorted.
Back and Forth Conversation “Look at that,” Jim said. “I know,” whispered Joe. “How do you know?” “I just do.” “Yeah, right.” (You can stop using their names each time when they talk back and forth right away).
Continued Talking • No Capital letter if you continue after you write: I said or Joe said “Sir,” I said to the officer, “the kid just broke his arm.”
Narrative Vocabulary • Cause and effect: Do something, something happens • Chronological order: Events go in order of TIME
Narrative Vocabulary • Flashback: Go back in time to explain an event or feeling • Foreshadowing: Hints to future events • Adjectives: Describe nouns • Sensory language: See, hear, feel, taste, smell
Figurative Language • Idiom: Piece of cake • Personification: The wind was screaming… • Oxymoron: Jumbo shrimp
Figurative Language • Simile: She was like a tiger on the court. • Metaphor: She was a tiger… • Hyperbole: I am so hungry I could eat a horse. I am so tired I could die. • Alliteration: Billy Bob bought a bright blue BMW.
Point of View First Person: Character is the narrator. Use “I” and “we” Second Person: When the narrator puts the reader in place of the main character. Uses “you” Third Person Limited: Only see the perspective of one character.
Point of view Third Person Omniscient: • The narrator knows the thoughts of all characters. You see the story from many perspectives.
Character Traits • CLASS COPY • Read through with partner • Think of fav. Fictional character • Fav book, movie, TV show • Follow the flow chart and diagrams • Copy and complete them in your • NB: writing section
“Home Run” • Read the poem • Analyze how the moment gets slowed down • Answer the questions in your NB: writing section
Group work • You will be working in groups and analyzing 4 different personal narratives • For each of the narratives you must use SOAPSTone • “We’re Poor” • “Salvation” • “Frank Sinatra’s Gum” • “The Death of a Moth”
Personal Narrative • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWHc5Yar6Ps • What is an important lesson you learned?