nordonia high school english 9 cp presented by mrs. tolin mrs. smith

20
SHORT STORIES STRUCTURE, PURPOSE, SETTING, CONFLICT & CHARACTERIZATION Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

Upload: george-harper

Post on 20-Jan-2018

223 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 CHRONOLOGICAL  FLASHBACK  IN MEDIA RES (in the middle)

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

SHORT STORIESSTRUCTURE, PURPOSE, SETTING, CONFLICT & CHARACTERIZATION

Nordonia High SchoolEnglish 9 CP

Presented by Mrs. TolinMrs. Smith

Page 2: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

PLOT

It is an necessary element for any type of story.

Without a good plot line, you have nothing . . .

The most basic arrangement of events

PLOT IS THE LITERARY ELEMENT THAT DESCRIBES THE STRUCTURE OF THE STORY.

Page 3: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

TYPES OF LINEAR PLOTS CHRONOLOGICAL

FLASHBACK

IN MEDIA RES (in the middle)

Page 4: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

PLOT STRU

CTURE 5 MAIN PARTS TO THE PLOT STRUCTURE

Page 5: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

PLOT STRUCTURE

Exposition:setting, characters & basic plot: the situation before the action starts

Conflict: Main problem of a story. Four main types: man vs. man, man vs. self, man vs. nature, man vs. society

Rising Action: All of the events that lead up to the climax, the series of crisis in the story

Climax: the highest point of interest, the most intense moment; the character makes a decision that cannot be reversed

Falling Action: All of the action which follows the climax

Resolution: the conclusion, the tying together of all of the threads

Page 6: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

THE PURPOSE OF THE SHORT STORY

Demonstrate a universal truth

Emphasize a character trait

Accentuate a mood or feeling

Recreate a scene

Teach a moral lesson Entertain Challenge the reader’s

intellect Answers the question

“what’s the point of stories that aren’t even true?”

Page 7: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

The Setting of a Short StoryThe Environment in which a story takes place

Includes both TIME & PLACE

Page 8: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

HOW SETTING FUNCTIONS IN A STORY

PROVIDES A BACKDROP FOR THE ACTION IN A STORY

ESTABLISHES ATMOSPHERE (SETS THE MOOD)

SHAPES CHARACTER & ACTION

REFLECTS CHARACTER PSYCHOLOGY

Page 9: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

HO

W AU

THO

RS CREATE SETTIN

G

Example: using real cities or street names; describing a place as realistically as possible

Example: smell of cookies during winter break; swimming in cold lake water

DETAILS: BUILD DESCRIPTION WITH REALISTIC DETAILS TO MAKE IT BELIEVABLE

SENSE IMAGES: APPEAL TO SENSES, WHICH HELPS READER RELATE TO PERSONAL EXPERIENCES

Page 10: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

QUESTIONS I SHOULD ASK WHILE READING

WHAT IS THE PHYSICAL BACKDROP? DOES IT CREATE ATMOSPHERE/ SHAPE CHARACTERS’ ACTIONS/REFLECT INNER THOUGHTS?

WHAT TECHNIQUES DID THE AUTHOR USE?

Page 11: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

Conflicts & Short StoriesThe central source of tension and drama that makes a story interesting to read and gives it purpose

Page 12: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

CATEGO

RIES OF CO

NFLICT

Character vs. Character

› Conflict between 2 people or 2 groups of people

› Examples: family troubles, bullies or romantic trouble

Page 13: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

CATEGO

RIES OF CO

NFLICT

Character vs. Society

› Between individual and larger groups

› Examples: outsider in a strange culture, a struggle to “make it” in the world

Page 14: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

CATEGORIES OF CONFLICT

Character vs. Nature› Individual and the

natural world

› Examples: Fighting a force of nature

› Surviving a plane crash in the desert

Page 15: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

CATEGO

RIES OF CO

NFLICT

Character vs. Self› Psychological conflicts

within a person

› Examples: Overcoming a drug habit

› Grieving over loss of loved one

› Making a moral decision

Page 16: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

READING STRATEGIES:

Story Problem

› Try to state the problem in one sentence

Elements of plot

› Include both the conflict and the climax

Page 17: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

CHARACTERIZATIONThe methods a writer uses to

communicate information about characters to readers

Page 18: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

Techniques of Characterization

DIRECT: The author tells the readers details about the character directly› Even though she was the youngest, Sarah

was the smartest of all three sisters

INDIRECT: The author shows the character in action and lets readers make their own interpretations› At report card time, Sarah received an A in

all subjects, unlike her sisters.

Page 19: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

AUTH

OR’S

CHARACTERIZATIO

N TO

OLS

Character’s Name Physical Appearance How the character is

dressed Occupation Home & Surroundings Habit’s and Actions What other characters

say about him or her

Page 20: Nordonia High School English 9 CP Presented by Mrs. Tolin Mrs. Smith

Understanding Character Defined by the qualities that make them think, act

and feel in certain ways.

› Values: What people, places or things are most important in the character’s life? What does he or she value most?

› Feelings: What Emotions does the character feel most strongly?

› Goals: What are the character’s greatest hopes? What are they working to accomplish?

› Problems: What other characters or circumstances are keeping the character from achieving his goals?