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Five Elements of Fiction

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Five Elements of Fiction 1. Character People or animals who take part in the action Most authors use few characters; 2-6 Usually one character is the main character ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Five Elements of Fiction


1
Five Elements of Fiction
2
1. Character
  • People or animals who take part in the action
  • Most authors use few characters 2-6
  • Usually one character is the main character

3
How Characters Are Revealed
  • By author comment, where the author tells a
    persons actions
  • By a characters actions
  • By a characters comments
  • By what other characters say

4
Useful Character Questions
  • What traits does each character have?
  • How are they revealed?
  • Does a character change during the story? How?
  • Does the character remind you of someone you know?

5
2. Plot
  • Plot is the series of events or the main story
  • Plot is based on a conflict or conflicts
  • Between two characters - human vs. human
  • Between a character and society human vs.
    society
  • Between a character and nature or the
    supernatural human vs. nature
  • Within a character human vs. him/herself

6
Plot Map
7
Parts of the Plot
  • Exposition or Opening setting, characters and
    situation are revealed
  • Rising Action the action is developed by
    incident, description, characterization and
    dialogue
  • Climax the culmination of the events of rising
    action the most exciting moment the highest
    point of interest
  • Falling Action follows the climax and explains
    any details that need further clarification.
    Usually short

8
3. Point of View
  • Point of view is the relationship of the
    storyteller to the story
  • First person The narrative is told by one of
    the characters from the I point of view.
  • Limited third person The narrator tells the
    story using he and she. This point of view
    can be limited with the narrator knowing only the
    thoughts and feelings of one character.
  • Omniscient The narrator tells the story using
    he and she, but the narrator knows the
    thoughts and feelings of all the characters.

9
4. Setting
  • The time and place in which the action takes
    place
  • Normally explained at or near the beginning of
    the story
  • Geographical location, scenery, weather,
    furniture, clothing, time of year, period of
    history give indications of setting

10
5. Theme
  • The main idea or meaning or message of a story
  • Not the same as the subject or a summary
  • The authors reflection on a universal truth,
    possibly a lesson or a moral
  • The author will not tell you directly what the
    theme is
  • Theme is revealed through character, setting and
    point of view
  • You need to read the entire book before you can
    determine the theme

11
The Theme Sounds Like a Fortune Cookie Message
  • How we act, not how we look determines how
    beautiful we are
  • Honesty is the best policy
  • Sometimes bad things happen to good people
  • The truth hurts
  • The truth will set you free
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