Short Stories - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Short Stories

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Other Terms to Know Feelings/ attitudes: Mood (atmosphere) Feeling created in reader by story details Tone writer s attitude toward audience or subject e.g ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Short Stories


1
Short Stories
2
Short story definition
  • Brief work of fiction

3
Elements of A Short Story
  • Character
  • Plot
  • Point of View
  • Setting
  • Theme

4
Plot
  • The sequence of events in a literary work.

5
Plot elements
  • Plot is built on five main parts
  • - Exposition
  • Rising Action
  • Climax
  • Falling Action
  • Resolution (Denouement)

6
Plot Line
7
Plot
  • Exposition introduces setting, characters,
    basic situation introduction
  • Rising Action- inciting incident central
    conflict introduced leads to climax
  • Climax high point of interest or suspense
    turning point light bulb moment

8
Plot
  • Falling Action - Conflict begins to resolve
    story tapers off leads to resolution
  • Resolution Denouement end of story conflicts
    resolved

9
Character
  • Person, animal, natural force or object in a
    story or play.

10
Characterization
  • Authors way of revealing the personality of a
    character

11
Characterization
  • Direct Characterization - Writer directly states
    characters traits tells reader what kind of
    person the character is.
  • Indirect Characterization Author provides
    clues reader must use own judgment to identify
    personality traits of a character

12
CharacterIndirect Characterization
  • Five methods for revealing character
  • - Actions (what he does)
  • Appearance (what he looks like)
  • - Other characters reactions
  • Speech (how he speaks what he says)
  • Thoughts (what he thinks)
  • Most effective techniques

13
Characterization
  • Static character does NOT change during story
  • Dynamic character develops and grows during story

14
Characterization
  • Flat character Shows only one personality trait
    cartoon character
  • Round character Many different personality
    traits (virtues vices)

15
Characterization
  • Protagonist Main character often changes may
    NOT be the good guy
  • Antagonist Character or force in conflict with
    protagonist
  • may NOT be the bad guy

16
Conflict
  • Struggle between opposing forces
  • Internal character struggles with self
  • e.g. fear vs. duty/ duty vs. pride/ training
    vs. instinct
  • External character struggles against outside
    forces

17
External Conflict
  • Man vs. man
  • Man vs. nature
  • Man vs. society
  • Man vs. fate/destiny

18
Character Dialogue
  • Conversation between characters
  • May reveal traits advance action
  • Indicated by quotation marks
  • New paragraph change of speaker

19
Character Motivation
  • Reasons character thinks, feels, acts, or behaves
    in certain way
  • Result of personality situation

20
Narrator
  • Speaker/character who tells story
  • NOT always the author!
  • Choice of narrator determines POV

21
Point of View POV
  • Vantage point from which
  • the author tells the story
  • Controls info (type amount)
  • the author reveals

22
First Person POV
  • One of characters tells story, using pronoun I
  • May be reliable narrator
  • May be unreliable narrator

23
Third Person POV
  • Voice outside story narrates story using 3rd
    person pronouns,
  • e.g. he, she, they
  • Two types
  • Limited one character
  • Omniscient all characters

24
Third Person Limited POV
  • Narrator sees the world through one characters
    eyes
  • Reveals only that one characters thoughts.

25
Third Person Omniscient POV
  • All Knowing
  • Narrator outside the story tells readers what all
    characters think and feel.

26
Setting
  • Time and place of action in a story or play
  • Time historical period, year, season, climate,
    time of day
  • Place geographic, social, economic, cultural

27
Setting can provide/reveal
  • Atmosphere mood or feeling created in reader
  • Background place for characters to live act
  • Character how he lives where he lives
  • Conflict something against which character must
    fight

28
Setting
  • One of oldest story plots in the world
  • a person fights against something in the
    physical world
  • drought, horde of ants, heat of the desert,
    storm, shipwreck, etc.

29
Theme
  • Central idea or message or insight into life
    contained in the story
  • Subject/topic
  • answer to question
  • What about it?
  • THEME

30
Theme
  • A theme reveals something about a subject
  • Subject of story is NOT theme of story
  • Subject topic of story
  • e.g. love, war, greed, journey
  • Love is a subject, NOT a theme.
  • Ask yourself. . . What about love?

31
Theme
  • Stated author directly reveals message, e.g.
    moral at end of folk/fairy tale
  • Implied author indirectly suggests his belief
    about people or life
  • reader must figure it out.

32
Finding a Theme
  • Does the title signify something important about
    the story?
  • Does the main character change during the story?
    Does he realize something he didnt know before?
  • Are there any important statements about life or
    people made in the story - by the words/actions
    of the narrator or characters?

33
Other Terms to Know
  • Allusion reference in a story that refers to
    Bible, history, or work of literature/art
  • Dialect way a character speaks
  • (directly related to setting
  • time period)

34
Other Terms to Know
  • Feelings/ attitudes
  • Mood (atmosphere) Feeling created in reader by
    story details
  • Tone writers attitude toward audience or
    subject
  • e.g. formal or informal, serious or playful,
    bitter or ironic

35
Other Terms to Know
  • Flashback info/material that occurred earlier
    than present time of narrative
  • Foreshadowing clues suggest events yet to occur
    in story creates suspense
  • Frame story story within a story,
  • e.g. Arabian Nights

36
Irony is a contrast or difference between
  • Between expectation and reality
  • (between what is expected to happen and what
    really happens)
  • Between what is said and what is
  • really meant
  • Between appearance and reality
  • (between what appears to be true vs.
  • what is really true)

37
Types of Irony
  • Verbal - writer or speaker says one thing but
    means another
  • Situational - what we expect to happen is
    different than what actually happens
  • Dramatic - Audience or reader knows what is
    happening but the characters do not.
  • (Audience knows characters dont)

38
Other Terms to Know
  • Suspense - The uncertain feeling about what is
    going to happen next in a story.

39
Other Terms to Know
  • Symbol - Anything that stands for or represents
    another person, object, or abstract idea
  • e.g. Red rose ?
  • American flag ?
  • storm ?

40
Symbol
  • Conventional universal representations, e.g.
    flags
  • Personal created by author through emphasis or
    repetition
  • e.g. scarlet ibis
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