Title: Elements of a Short Story
1Elements of a Short Story
2Plot
Climax
Rising Action
Falling Action
Exposition
Resolution
3Plot
- Exposition
- Rising Action
- Climax
- Falling Action
- Resolution
4Exposition
Presentation of essential information and conflict
5Rising Action
Events that lead up to the climax the conflict
builds
6Climax
The turning point the most important part of the
plot
7Falling Action
Events leading to resolution
8Resolution
Resolution-point where the conflict is solved and
loose ends are tied up
9Setting
Time Period
Details
Geographical Location
10Geographical Location
- In Disneys Beauty and the Beast, the story takes
place in the country of France.
11Time Period
- Disneys The Hunchback of Notre Dame was set
in the early 1800s
12Location Details
- In Disneys The Little Mermaid, some parts of the
story take place in an underwater grotto filled
with human artifacts and hidden treasures.
13Characterization
- Direct Characterization
- Indirect Characterization
14Direct Characterization
- The boy was very sneaky
- The old woman was frail and weak
- What the author actually comes right out and
tells you about the character.
15Indirect Characterization
- Information that the reader must infer from what
the character says, does, and thinks
- The beady-eyed boy shot his hand across the desk
when the girl wasnt looking and stole her
homework
16Point of View
- 1st person observer
- 1st person main character
- 3rd person limited
- 3rd person omniscient
171st Person Observer
The person telling the story is not a character
in the story, but still uses the pronoun I
181st Person Main Character
The person telling the story is a main character
in the story
193rd Person Limited
The narrator uses the 3rd person pronouns he,
she, and they. A limited narrator knows the
thoughts and feelings of only one or a few of the
characters in the story
203rd Person Omniscient
The narrator uses the 3rd person pronouns he,
she, and they. An omniscient narrator knows
the thoughts and feelings of all the characters
in the story.
21Imagery
- Imagery is language that appeals to the senses.
This is not limited to just your sense of sight
it also includes hearing, smell, touch and taste.
22Figurative Language
- Symbolism- A symbol is something that stands for
something other than itself - Metaphor- a comparison that does not use like or
as - Simile-a comparison that uses like or as
- Personification- giving human qualities to a
non-human object
23Symbolism
We use symbols in our everyday lives
24Colors as Symbols
25RED
26YELLOW
27GREEN
28BLUE
29PURPLE
30WHITE
31BLACK
32Some others, just for fun
33Irony
- Dramatic Irony- when the audience knows something
that the characters do not - Situational Irony- when the outcome of a
situation is different than expected - Verbal Irony- when what is said is different than
what is meant (sarcasm)
34Theme
- The message that the author is trying to convey