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Welcome to our Short Story Unit

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Title: Teaching Plot Structure Through Short Stories Author: Patricia Schulze Last modified by: Default User2 Created Date: 7/7/2004 5:34:25 PM Document presentation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to our Short Story Unit


1
Welcome to ourShort Story Unit
2
Author
  • The writer of a literary work or document (novel,
    short story, poem, etc.)

3
Character
  • A person or animal in a story, play, or other
    literary work.

4
Characterization
  • How an author reveals a characters personality.
  • As readers we, whether we actually realize it or
    not, build our own perceptions of the characters.

5
Direct Characterization
  • Direct characterization
  • the author directly tells you what the character
    is like
  • As we supported him up the steps, the door
    banged open and Cheryl came bursting out of the
    house. She was all smiles and was so obviously
    glad to see Grandpa that I was ashamed of how I
    felt (Sneve 123).

6
Indirect Characterization
  • The author reveals the characters personality
    through
  • 1 What the character says
  • 2 What the character does

Bobby picks on his brother whenever his parents
arent looking.
7
More Indirect Characterization
  • 3 What the character feels or thinks

Bob scowled as he thought to himself Id like to
kick this machine across the room.
8
Last but not least.
  • 4 How other characters feel or what other
    characters say about the character
  • 5 What the character looks like (physical
    appearance and clothing)

9
Conflict
  • Conflict is the dramatic struggle between two
    forces in a story. Without conflict, there is no
    plot.

10
Internal Conflict
11
Types of External Conflict
Character vs. Fate/Destiny
Character vs. Supernatural
12
Foreshadowing
  • The use of clues or hints to suggest events that
    will occur later in the plot

13
Mood/Atmosphere
  • Overall feeling of a piece of literature.
  • Can be described with one or two adjectives
    (scary, happy, sad)
  • Authors often use word choice, style, and imagery
    to convey a certain feeling for the reader

14
Setting
  • The time and place of a story.
  • Most often, the setting is described in the
    exposition (beginning) of a story.
  • Setting often plays an emotional role.
  • Contributes to the plot especially in character
    vs. nature conflict.

15
Point of View
  • The vantage point from which a story is told (who
    is telling the story)
  • The three most common points of view are
  • Omniscient
  • Third-person limited
  • First Person

16
Omniscient
  • The all-knowing point-of-view
  • Narrator knows everything about all the
    characters and their thoughts, feelings, and
    motivations
  • The omniscient narrator stands apart rather like
    a god
  • This narrator is not actually part of the story
    or the action

17
Third-Person Limited
  • Narrator focuses on thoughts and feelings of only
    one character
  • We see the story through this characters eyes
    only
  • The narrator has very limited information about
    any other character other than the ONE they are
    focusing on

18
First Person
  • One of the characters, using the pronoun I
  • We only know what this person knows
  • Information may not be reliable

19
Protagonist/Antagonist
  • Protagonist The good guy/ usually the main
    character of the story and the person we are
    generally rooting for
  • Antagonist The bad guy/ the character or
    force working against the protagonist

20
Short Story
  • A short fictional narrative
  • Generally only have a few characters and usually
    only one setting
  • Usually only one central conflict

21
Suspense
  • The uncertainty or anxiety that a reader feels
    about what will happen next in a story.
  • Suspense is created by mood, as well as the
    following techniques
  • Foreshadowing hints of whats to come
  • Mystery withholding information from the
    reader unusual or bizarre circumstances
  • Reversal good to bad or bad to good
  • Dilemma forced to choose between two dangerous
    situations

22
Symbol (ism)
  • A person, place, thing, or event that has a
    deeper meaning and represents something beyond
    its literal meaning

23
Theme
  • The general idea or insight about life that a
    work of literature reveals.
  • An idea or message the author wishes to convey
    about the subject.
  • Most often themes are not stated directly.
  • The reader has to think about all the elements of
    the work.

Dont mess with fate.
24
Tone
  • The attitude a writer takes toward his or her
    subject, characters, and/or audience
  • Tone is conveyed through the authors word choice
  • Tone is often times dependent upon the authors
    purpose and message
  • Types of tone sarcastic, friendly, supportive,
    pleading, bitter/angry, humorous, serious, solemn

25
Plot
Plot is the literary element that describes the
structure (a chain of events/the skeleton) of a
story. It shows the cause-effect relationship of
events and actions within a story.
26
Plot Components
Climax the turning point, the most intense
momenteither mentally or in action reveals how
conflict will turn out
Rising Action the series of events
(complications) about the conflict in the story
that lead to the climax
Falling Action all of the action which follows
the climax
Exposition the start of the story, the
situation before the action starts setting,
characters, conflict introduced
Resolution the conclusion, the tying together of
all of the threads
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