Elements of Fiction: - Setting - Character - Plot - Point View - Theme - Symbolism - Other

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 19

Elements of Fiction

•Setting
•Character
•Plot
•Point of View
•Theme
•Symbolism
•Other
Setting
the time, place and period in which the action takes
place. It includes

The geographical
location The socio-economic
The time period characteristics of the
location

The specific location


-building, room, etc.
Setting
can help in the portrayal of characters.

“I write this sitting in the kitchen sink. That is, my feet are in it; the rest of me is on the draining-board."
I capture the Castle by Dodie Smith

“Sir Walter Scott the Younger of Buccleugh was in church marrying his aunt the day the English killed his
granny."

Dorothy Dunnett
Disorderly Knights
Setting
in some works of fiction action is so closely
related to setting that the plot is directed by it.

"Francis St. Croix spotted it first, a black dot floating in an ocean of water and
ice. When he and Ernie rowed alongside for a look, they couldn't believe their
eyes. There was a baby inside a makeshift cradle on an ice pan, bobbing like an
ice cube on the sea. How had a baby come to be in the North Atlantic?"
Latitudes of Melt
Joan Clark

It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.”

George Orwell, 1984;


Setting
can establish the atmosphere of a work.

It Was a Dark and Stormy Night…


Snoopy

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."


A Tale of Two Cities
Characters

 Protagonist

The main character in a


literary work.

 Antagonist

The character who


opposes the protagonist.
Types of Characters
The people (or animals, things, etc. presented as people) appearing in a
literary work.

•Round Character: convincing, true to life and have many


character traits.
•Dynamic Character: undergoes some type of change in
story because of something that happens to them.
•Flat Character: stereotyped, shallow, often symbolic.
They have one or two personality traits.
•Static Character: does not change in the course of the
story
Methods of Characterization
• direct- “he was an old man…
• characters’ thoughts, words, and actions
• reactions/comments of other characters
• character’s physical appearance
• characters’ thoughts
"He no longer dreamed of
storms, nor of women , nor of
great occurrences, nor of great
fish, nor fights, nor contests
of strength, nor of his wife.
He only dreamed of places
now and of the lions on the
beach. They played like
young cats in the dusk and he
loved them as he loved the
boy."
Plot
The series of events and actions that takes place in a story.

Climax

Beginning End

Expositions Resolution
Plot Line
Climax: The turning point. The most intense
moment (either mentally or in action.

Rising Action: the


series of conflicts and Falling Action: all of the action
crisis in the story that which follows the Climax.
lead to the climax.

Resolution: The conclusion, the


Exposition: The start of the story. The
tying together of all of the threads.
way things are before the action starts.
Elements of Plot

•Conflict
•Man VS Man
•Man VS Nature
•Man VS Society
•Man VS Himself
Point of View:
The perspective from which the story is told.
(Who is telling the story?)

Omniscient Point of View: The author is telling the story.

Limited Omniscient: Third person, told from the viewpoint of a


character in the story.

First Person: Story is told from point of view of one of the


characters who uses the first person pronoun “I.”
The Theme
of a piece of fiction is its central idea.
It usually contains some insight into the human
condition.

The Literary Element of Theme


•a general statement of the central, underlying, and controlling idea or insight of
a work of literature.
• the idea the writer wishes to convey about the subject—the writer’s view of the
world or a revelation about human nature.
•can be expressed in a single sentence.

Theme is NOT-
• expressed in a single word
• the purpose of a work
• the moral
• the conflict
The Literary Element of Theme

Identifying the Theme in Five Steps


To identify the theme, be sure that you’ve first identified the
story’s plot, the way the story uses characterization, and the
primary conflict in the story.

1. Summarize the plot by writing a one-sentence description for the exposition,


the conflict, the rising action, the climax, the falling action, and the
resolution.

2. Identify the subject of the work.

3. Identify the insight or truth that was learned about the subject.
• How did the protagonist change?
• What lesson did the protagonist learn from the resolution of the conflict?
The Literary Element of Theme

4. State how the plot presents the primary insight or truth


about the subject.

5. Write one or more generalized, declarative sentences that


state what was learned and how it was learned.

Theme Litmus Test


• Is the theme supported by evidence from the work
itself?
• Are all the author’s choices of plot, character,
conflict, and tone controlled by this theme?
Symbolism

A symbol represents an idea, quality, or concept larger than itself.

A Journey can
Water may
symbolize life.
represent a new
beginning.

Black can represent


evil or death. A lion could be a
symbol of courage.
Other Fiction Elements

•Allusion: a reference to a person, place or literary,


historical, artistic, mythological source or event.
“It was in St. Louis, Missouri, where they have that
giant McDonald’s thing towering over the
city…”(Bean Trees 15)
•Atmosphere: the prevailing emotional and mental
climate of a piece of fiction.
•Dialogue: the reproduction of a conversation between
two of the characters.
Other Elements Continued

•Foreshadowing: early clues about what will


happen later in a piece of fiction.
•Irony: a difference between what is expected and
reality.
•Style: a writer’s individual and distinct way of
writing. The total of the qualities that distinguish
one author’s writing from another’s.
Other Elements Continued
•Structure: the way time moves through a novel.
•Chronological: starts at the beginning and moves
through time.
•Flashback: starts in the present and then goes back to
the past.
•Circular or Anticipatory: starts in the present, flashes
back to the past, and returns to the present at the
conclusion.
•Panel: same story told from different viewpoints. (Lou
Ann and Taylor chapters in The Bean Trees.

You might also like