1) Types of Characters
1) Types of Characters
1) Types of Characters
1) Types of Characters:
Protagonist (hero): the central figure with whom we usually sympathize or identify
Antagonist (villain): the figure who opposes the protagonist and creates the conflict
Foil Character: the figure whose personality traits are the opposite of the main character’s. This is a
supporting character and usually made to shine the protagonist.
2) The ways characters are portrayed:
Flat Characters (stock, static characters or stereotypes): they have no depth and no change; we
only see one side or aspect of them. Most supporting characters are portrayed in this way, for
example, a strict teacher, a helpful policeman, and an evil stepmother.
Round Characters (dynamic character): they have more fully developed personalities. We expect the
protagonists and antagonists to be rounded individuals who express a range of emotion and change
throughout the narrative, usually toward greater maturity.
3) The ways characters are revealed:
What the narrator says about the character
Setting
1) The setting refers to the time, the geographical locations, and the general environment
and circumstances that prevail in a narrative. The setting helps to establish the mood of a
story.
Backdrop Setting: the setting is vague and general, which helps to convey a universal, timeless tale.
This type of setting is often found in folktales and simply sets the stage and the mood. For example,
"long ago in a cottage in the deep woods" and "once upon a time there was a great land that had an
Emperor."
Omniscient Narrator (multiple points of view; the narrator is "all-knowing"): the narrator is not a
character in the story but knows everything about the story. The omniscient narrator can show the
thoughts and experiences of any character in the story. It permits the writer the broadest scope.
Limited Narrator (External Subjective Narrator; the 3rd person point of view): the narrator is not a
character in the story but looks at things only through the eyes of a single character. This type of
narrative permits the narrator to quickly build a close bond between the protagonist and the reader,
without being confined by the protagonist’s educational or language restrictions.
Plot
1) The plot of a story is a series of interconnected events in which every occurrence has
a specific purpose. A plot is all about establishing connections, suggesting
causes, and showing relationships.
A Dramatic or Progressive Plot: This is a chronological structure which first establishes the setting and
conflict, then follows the rising action through to a climax (the peak of the action and turning point),
and concludes with a denouement (a wrapping up of loose ends).
An Episodic Plot: This is also a chronological structure, but it consists of a series of loosely related
incidents, usually of chapter length, tied together by a common theme and/or characters. Episodic
plots work best when the writer wishes to explore the personalities of the characters, the nature of
their existence, and the flavor of an era.
A Parallel Plot: The writer weaves two or more dramatic plots that are usually linked by a common
character and a similar theme.
A Flashback: This structure conveys information about events that occurred earlier. It permits authors
to begin the story in the midst of the action but later fill in the background for full understanding of the
present events. Flashbacks can occur more than once and in different parts of a story.
Conflict
1) The theme is the main, underlying idea of a piece of literature. It is woven subtly into the
fabric of the story rather than being lectured or preached by the author.
2) Among the frequently found thematic issues in children’s literature are the problems of
growing up and maturing, such as adjustment to society, love and friendship, achieving
one’s identity, and finding one's place in the world.
Style
1) Word Choice
Longer sentences work best when explanations and descriptions are needed.
Prose has rhythm just as poetry does. Its rhythm can be produced by the juxtaposition of sounds, the
use of repetition with a slight variation of patterns, and the varied length of sentences.
4) Dialogue: the words spoken by the characters, usually to each other, not to the reader.
Children especially enjoy dialogue as a realistic and convincing way of defining
character.
Tone
1) Tone refers to the author’s mood and manner of expression in a work of literature. The
tone can be serious, didactic, humorous, satirical, caustic/sarcastic, passionate, sensitive,
sentimental, zealous, indifferent, poignant, warm, agitated, and so on.
2) Humor:
Incongruity is the foundation of humor. We laugh at the tension resulting from something out of the
ordinary.
Humor is elusive.
Humor can be either sympathetic or negative. One prerequisite is that the victim must seem to deserve
the fate or the harm must not be critical.
Ten Types of humor most common in children’s books (Kappas, 1967):
Exaggeration
Incongruity
Surprise
Slapstick
Absurdity
Situational humor
Ridicule/satire
Defiance
Violence
Verbal Humor: word play, name-calling, jokes and puns, malapropisms (the unintentional misuse of
language), or the misinterpretation of language.
3) Parody:
A parody is a literary imitation of another piece of literature, usually using exaggeration for comic
purpose.
A parody implies a degree of sophistication that deconstructs the original story and depicts the
characters from a different perspective.
Parodies can demonstrate the vitality of literature and can suggest new ways of interpreting old
tales.
4) Condescending tones:
Condescending tones are inappropriate for children's stories, placing the adult narrator in a superior
position.
For examples, a moralizing, didactic, sentimental, or cynical tone is not appreciated in children's
literature nowadays.