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1、 Elements of Fiction - A Brief Introduction A. Primary Elements: Plot, Character, Theme, Points of View, Symbol, SettingB. Secondary Elements: Imagery, Irony, Style & Tone, Exposition1. Plot - the sequence of events or incidents of which the story is composed/the arrangement of events that make up a
2、 story/the complete pattern or design of the work. A. Conflict is a clash of actions, ideas, desires or wills. a. Person against person. b. Person against environment - external force, physical nature, society, or fate.c. Person against herself/himself - conflict with some element in her/his own nat
3、ure; maybe physical, mental, emotional, or moral.d. Person against God-Greek mythology.B. Artistic Unity - essential to a good plot; nothing irrelevant that does not contribute to the total meaning; nothing that is there only for its own sake or its own excitement.C. Plot Manipulation and Fabulation
4、 - a good plot should not have any unjustified or unexpected turns or twists, no false leads, and no deliberate and misleading information; fabulation is the introduction of the fabulous or unrealistic or gothic elements in an otherwise realistic setting.D. Story Ending: In a Happy Ending the stereo
5、typical expectation is that the protagonist must solve all the problems, defeat the villain, win the girl, and live happily everafter. Unfortunately, many real life situations have unhappy endings; for the writers of serious fiction, the unhappy endings are more likely to raise significant issues co
6、ncerning life and living.E. Types of Plot: a. Tragedy(noble) b. Comedy(less great/noble) c. Romance(less great/noble) d. Satire (used to teach lesson or present a point of viewF. Use of Plot: a. The structure of its actions b. Order: 1st, 2nd, 3rd c. To create(The author uses actions as a painter us
7、es paints to create) d. To achieve particular words to create certain effect2. Character A. Direct Presentation - author tells us straight out, by exposition or analysis, or through another character.B. Indirect Presentation - author shows us the character in action; the reader infers what a charact
8、er is like from what she/he thinks, or says, or does. These are also called dramatized characters and they are generally consistent (in behavior), motivated (convincing), and plausible (lifelike).C. Character Types - a Flat character is known by one or two traits; a Round character is complex and ma
9、ny-sided; a Stock character is a stereotyped character (a mad scientist, the absent-minded professor, the cruel mother-in-law); a Static character remains the same from the beginning of the plot to the end; and a Dynamic (developing) character undergoes permanent change. This change must be a. withi
10、n the possibilities of the character; b. sufficiently motivated; and c. allowed sufficient time for change.D. Protagonist and Antagonist - the protagonist is the central character, sympathetic or unsympathetic. The forces working against her/him, whether persons, things, conventions of society, or t
11、raits of their own character, are the antagonists.3. Theme - the controlling idea or central insight. It can be 1. a revelation of human character; 2. may be stated briefly or at great length; and 3. a theme is not the moral of the story. A. A theme must be expressible in the form of a statement - n
12、ot motherhood but Motherhood sometimes has more frustration than reward.B. A theme must be stated as a generalization about life; names of characters or specific situations in the plot are not to be used when stating a theme.C. A theme must not be a generalization larger than is justified by the ter
13、ms of the story.D. A theme is the central and unifying concept of the story. It must adhere to the following requirements: 1. It must account for all the major details of the story. 2. It must not be contradicted by any detail of the story. 3. It must not rely on supposed facts - facts not actually
14、stated or clearly implied by the story.E. There is no one way of stating the theme of a story.F. Any statement that reduces a theme to some familiar saying, aphorism, or clich should be avoided. Do not use A stitch in time saves nine, You cant judge a book by its cover, Fish and guests smell in three days, and so on.