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Written%20by:%20Angelia%20Greiner

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Title: Written%20by:%20Angelia%20Greiner


1
  • Written by Angelia Greiner
  • Additional Material by Kelley McConathy

2
The Short Story
  • History
  • Short story versus novel
  • Elements
  • Famous short stories

3
What Is a Short Story?
  • Possible Definitions

A form of short fictional prose
Brings a singular illumination to the reader,
sudden and golden like sunlight cracking through
heavy cloud. I went on to say that in my opinion
a real" short-story was closer to poetry than to
the novel. Alex Keegan
Must be able to be read in one sitting
4
A Timeline
Oral Storytelling
Fables
Parables
Anecdotes
14th century Chaucers Canterbury Tales
14th century Boccaccios Decameron
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5
Europe 5 B.C.
6
The Novella
1690s The Fairy Tale
Mid-17th Century The Nouvelle
Early 19th Century The Modern Short Story
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7
History Recap
  • Oral storytelling
  • Fables
  • Anecdotes
  • Parables

8
Oral Storytelling
  • The telling of a story by word of mouth
  • Repetition of words or phrases
  • Use of nicknames or descriptive phrases for
    characters
  • Use of rhyme, assonance, and alliteration
  • More entertaining than unified

9
Examples
  • Fleet-footed Achilles, Cow-eyed Hera,
    Grey-eyed Athena, wine-darkened sea
  • Beowulf bode in the burg of the Scyldings,
    leader beloved, and long he ruled in fame with
    all folk
  • Thereupon Fergus uttered this oath I swear,
    necks of men I would break from necks of men,
    arms of men from arms of men, scalps of men
    from scalps of men

10
Fables
  • A brief story illustrating a moral
  • Often include talking animals or objects

11
The Man and the Serpent
A Countrymans son by accident trod upon a
Serpent's tail, which turned and bit him so that
he died. The father in a rage got his axe, and
pursuing the Serpent, cut off part of its tail.
So the Serpent in revenge began stinging several
of the Farmers cattle and caused him severe
loss. Well, the Farmer thought it best to make
it up with the Serpent, and brought food and
honey to the mouth of its lair, and said to it
Lets forget and forgive perhaps you were
right to punish my son, and take vengeance on
my cattle, but surely I was right in trying to
revenge him now that we are both satisfied why
should not we be friends again? No, no, said
the Serpent take away your gifts you can never
forget the death of your son, nor I the loss of
my tail. Injuries may be forgiven, but not
forgotten.
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12
Anecdotes
  • Short narrative account
  • Usually does not exist alone

13
Anecdote Example
Sometimes I simply can not speak. Especially
when the topic is one Ive only thought of, but
never verbalized. This most recently happened
when I was trying to explain genetic programming
to a cute girl. Now, you may question my logic,
or even call me a nerdy idiot for bringing up GP
or trying to at least, but the words werent
coming. So severe were some of the pauses that at
times I was aphonic, mute. Id open my mouth,
make gesticulations in the air, but nothing. Feh.
Ive thought about GP a lot. There was even a
period in my life when it was essentially all
that was on my mind. But thoughts form in my
mind, in everyones mind, like a big network, and
sometimes trying to traverse this network without
repeating yourself while hitting every major
point is like some crazy Traveling Salesman
problem. Your stack overflows and you throw some
out-of-memory exception, then thats itverbal
blue-screen.
14
Parables
  • Short narrative designed to reveal
  • Teaches through comparison

15
Do You Know These Parables?
  • The Prodigal Son
  • The Mustard Seed

16
Short Story Versus the Novel
Read in one sitting Not able to read in one sitting
One single impression Diverse ideas
Few characters, one plot, and one theme Many characters, plots and subplots, and usually more than one theme
17
Quality 1 Short Story
  • Most can read story in one sitting

18
Quality 2 Short Story
  • Story meant to create
  • one single impression

19
Quality 3 Short Story
  • Few characters, one
  • plot, and one theme

20
Elements of the Short Story
  • Character
  • Setting
  • Plot
  • Theme

21
Character
  • Person in a literary work
  • Protagonist
  • Antagonist
  • Deuteragonist

22
Batman
Protagonist
deuteragonist or sidekick
and Robin
  • The Riddler
  • Mr. Freeze
  • (any arch villain)

Antagonist
23
Characterization
  • Creates connection between reader and character
  • Direct
  • Indirect

24
Direct or Indirect?
Mr. Pan was worried about his mother. He had
been worried about her when she was in China, and
now he was worried about her in New York.
I am not grieving, Lilli said. Of course, you
are, Mrs. Pan retorted. I see you are a true
woman, and women grieve when they are not wed so
that they can have children. You are grieving for
your children.
25
Type of Characters
  • Flat or Round?
  • Static or Dynamic?

26
Setting
  • Location and time period in which a story takes
    place

27
Point of View
  • The way a story is told and who tells it
  • First Person
  • Third Person

28
Third Person Narrative
  • Objective
  • Omniscient
  • Limited

29
Plot
  • Sequence of events in story
  • Exposition
  • Climax
  • Resolution

30
Plot
  • The plot is what happens in the story

climax
exposition
dénouement
31
Conflict
  • Person versus society
  • Person versus self
  • Person versus person
  • Person versus nature

32
Person versus Society
  • Person conflicts with society
  • Laws or rules
  • Customs or ways
  • Place in society

33
Person versus Self
  • Persons own values or beliefs conflict
  • Feels alienated or unsatisfied
  • Must make crucial decision in life
  • Realizes something about self

34
Person versus Person
  • Pits the protagonist against someone else
  • Struggles physically or emotionally against
    another person

35
Person versus Nature
  • Protagonist threatened by element of nature
  • Connection to the land
  • Physical forces of nature

36
Theme Definition
  • Underlying meaning of story
  • Universal truth
  • Significant statement about society, human
    nature, or the human condition

37
Themes
  • Freedom
  • Guilt
  • Love
  • Convictions
  • Heroes
  • Community
  • Social change
  • Loss
  • Patriotism
  • Communication
  • Evil
  • Family
  • Friendship
  • Loyalty
  • Acceptance
  • Hope
  • Alienation
  • Customs
  • Loneliness
  • Values
  • Money
  • Death
  • War
  • Choices
  • Prejudice
  • Denial
  • Poverty
  • Teamwork
  • Discrimination
  • Pride
  • Trust
  • Resourcefulness
  • Challenges
  • Ethical dilemmas
  • Nature
  • Leadership
  • Euthanasia
  • Commitment
  • Diversity
  • Power

38
Other Elements
  • Dialogue
  • Tone
  • Irony

39
Dialogue
  • Lines spoken by a character or characters
  • Provides characterization
  • Sets mood
  • Advances plot

40
Dialogue Example
  • Come, I said, with decision, we will go
    back your health is precious. You are rich,
    respected, admired, beloved you are happy, as
    once I was. You are a man to be missed. For me it
    is no matter. We will go back you will be ill,
    and I cannot be responsible. Besides, there is
    Luchesi.
  • The Cask of Amontillado
  • Edgar Allan Poe

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41
Tone
  • Authors attitude toward his or her subject

My aunt will be down presently, Mr. Nuttel,
said a very self-possessed young lady of fifteen
in the meantime you must try and put up with me.
42
Irony
  • Verbal
  • Dramatic
  • Situational

You say you bought a diamond necklace to replace
mine? .
Madame Forestier, deeply moved, took her two
hands. Oh, my poor Mathilde! But mine was
imitation. It was worth at the very most five
hundred francs!...
43
Famous Short Stories
  • Plot The Most Dangerous Game
  • Setting Contents of a Dead Mans Pockets
  • Character The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

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Jack Finney
Richard Connell
WashingtonIrving
44
Short Stories Go To Hollywood!
  • Plot The Fugitive
  • Setting Survivor and The Amazing Race
  • Character Capt. Jack Sparrow, Rambo, Rocky, and
    Indiana Jones

45
The Most Dangerous Game Video
Single click screen to view video clip
46
Other Famous Short Stories
  • Tone The Masque of the Red Death
  • Irony The Gift of the Magi
  • Theme A Visit to Grandmother

47
O. Henry Video
Single click screen to view video clip
48
Poe Video
Single click screen to view video clip
49
Bradbury on Poe Video
Single click screen to view video clip
50
Writers of Note
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • O. Henry
  • Ray Bradbury
  • Anton Chekhov
  • Guy de Maupassant

51
The Necklace Video
Single click screen to view video clip
52
In Conclusion The Short Storys Importance
  • Relevant to our own lives
  • Understanding of our own humanity
  • Entertaining
  • Universal connections

53
This presentation is dedicated to one of the
greatest short story writers of all time.
I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around,
and dont let anybody tell you different. Kurt
Vonnegut (1922-2007)
54
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