The document discusses the key elements of plot, including exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution. It explains that plot is the main sequence of events in a story that are shaped by conflict. Conflict is important as it provides the problem or struggle that drives the narrative. There can be more than one type of conflict, including man vs self, man vs man, and man vs nature. Plot development follows three patterns - man in a hole where the character must solve a problem, man in a tub where they focus internally, or man on the road where it is about the journey rather than solving a problem.
3. ___ Cinderella lives unhappily with
her stepsisters and their mother
___ Cinderella leaves hurriedly at
at midnight and loses a slipper
___ A fairy godmother appears and
provides Cinderella with clothes,
coach, and footmen
___ The prince says he will marry the
woman whom the slipper fits
___ Cinderella and the prince live
happily ever after
ORDER, PLEASE!
___ An invitation to the palace ball
arrives
___ Cinderella and the prince marry
___ The stepsisters prepare for and
go to the ball
___ The stepsisters try to force their
feet into the slipper, but it fits
only Cinderella
___ Cinderella goes to the ball and
dances with the prince
4. 5. PLOT
the main events of a play, novel, movie, or similar
work, devised and presented by the writer as an
interrelated sequence
What shapes the story
• Events that make up the story
5. 5. PLOT
the basic structure of the story
the series of related events in which a problem is explored
and then solved
created through conflict—a struggle between people, ideas
and other forces
can have more than one conflict
events can shift from past to present
8. 5.1 EXPOSITION
The characters and setting are revealed
• You are given background information
• Get to know [almost] all of „em!
Sets the scene for conflict
• You get your first taste of the main problem
• Who is the protagonist and what is his / her main
goal? What is at stake if s/he fails to attain it?
9. 5.2 RISING ACTION
The conflict or problem is developed
Events in the story become more complicated
Shows the progression of the story
You find out more about the different characters
10. 5.3 CLIMAX
The highest point of interest in a story
The tension, suspense, or most exciting part
• The “Turning Point”
• Will the conflict be resolved?
• What is going to happen next?
11.
12.
13.
14. Shows what happens to
the characters after the
climax
Events and complications
are usually resolved
• You know “what
happened next”
5.4 FALLING ACTION
15. 5.5 RESOLUTION
Shows how the conflict is resolved
• Concludes the falling action
Draws the story to an end
16.
17. HOMEWORK
Answer the Activity Sheet attached to your handout
Be ready to check and discuss the answers
NO HW, NO ENTRY, NO GRADE FOR THE
DAY
26. CONFLICT
Why is it necessary? Why is it important?
Without any conflict or problem, a story would
probably be pretty boring
27. CONFLICT
Any opposition that the main character faces
Does not refer to verbal arguments alone
• Battles
• Internal struggles
• Etc.
28. CONFLICT
Two main types:
• External
• Outsides one‟s self
• Internal
• Within one‟s self; must make some
decision, overcome pain, quiet one‟s
temper, resist an urge, etc.
29. 1. MAN VS. HIMSELF
A character has trouble deciding what to do or think
The struggle is internal
A character must overcome his own natures or make
a choice between two or more paths: good and evil; logic
and emotion
30.
31. When a character has
a conflict or problem
with another character
• Involves two
different characters
in a story
2. MAN VS. MAN
32.
33. 2. MAN VS. MAN
Most common type of conflict
There are many reasons why a character can have
a conflict with another character
Not all conflicts or problems
34.
35. 3. MAN VS. NATURE
A character has a conflict with Mother Nature,
who, at times, is unpredictable
Nature can leave people devastated by its power
36.
37.
38. CONFLICT
Why is it necessary? Why is it important?
Without any conflict or problem, a story would
probably be pretty boring
Can there be more than one conflict?
39. THE CONFLICT IS PART OF
THE PLOT
the series of related events in which a problem is
explored and then solved
created through conflict—a struggle between
people, ideas and other forces
can have more than one conflict
events can shift from past to present
40. WHAT IS THE PLOT?
the main events of a play, novel, movie, or similar
work, devised and presented by the writer as an
interrelated sequence
What shapes the story
• Events that make up the story
42. PLOT DEVELOPMENT
How a story progresses
Three types:
• Man in a hole
• Man in a tub
• Man on the road
43. The character has a
problem and s/he needs
to solve it
• Problem = hole
• Get outta there!
1. MAN IN A HOLE
44. 2. MAN IN A TUB
In the story, the character
focuses internally and may
lead to change in point of
view, attitude, feeling,
conviction, self, and concrete
action
45. The story is about a
journey, not about
finding a solution to a
problem
3. MAN ON THE ROAD
Notas do Editor
Review the girls: what are the literary elements we discussed last week?
These series of events make up the story. And every story has a…
The exposition introduces most if not all of the main characters in the story. It shows how they relate to one another, what their goals and motivations are, and the kind of person they are. Most importantly, in the exposition, the audience gets to know the main character (protagonist}, who gets to know his or her main goal and what is at stake if s/he fails to attain it.i.e. HUNGER GAMES: If Katniss doesn’t hunt, her family will suffer. Bridge to Terabithia: ASK CELINE ZAMORA. Jesse Aarons, the only boy in a family of five children, lives in rural southwest Virginia. His mother favors his sisters, while the father works out of state. The second youngest sister admires him though. A new neighbor arrives, one who seems to be part of a loving family. That girl is Leslie Burke, an only child whose parents are both wealthy writers. They fill a void in each other as Jess and Leslie soon become close friends. HOLES: At the beginning of the story, Stanley Yelnats, a 13-year-old boy who is supposedly affected by a family "curse", has been wrongly accused of stealing the shoes of the baseball player Clyde Livingston from a charity auction. As punishment for this crime, he is sent to Camp Green Lake, a juvenile detention and correctional facility where convicts of similar age are forced to dig holes to "build their character". Warden Walker, real granddaughter of Trout Walker, is actually looking for a buried treasure that outlaw Katherine "Kissin' Kate" Barlow stole from Stanley's great-grandfather. Years ago, Stanley's family got cursed by Madame Zeroni, a fortune-teller and ancestor, due to a promise not fulfilled by ElyaYelnats, Stanley's great-great-grandfather, more popularly known in the novel as a "no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing great-great-grandfather".
Generally, in this phase the protagonist understands his or her goal and begins to work toward it. At this point, the protagonist will encounter a couple of smaller problems and we see the character/s overcome these obstacles.DETAILS. Sometimes, you will not see the importance of certain events, but when the climax hits you, AHHHH. LIGHTBULB MOMENT.i.e. HG: Katniss’ experience in the arena. She makes new enemies as well as new friends.Bridge: Establishing Terabithia; Christmas gifts, etc.Holes: Finding treasure by digging holes; escapeWhat you are reading in LW now. BTW, what’s going on in Chapters 7-10?
The point of climax is the turning point of the story, where the main character makes the single big decision that defines the outcome of their story and who they are as a person. The beginning of this phase is marked by the protagonist finally dealing with the smaller problems. She is now ready to tackle the main problem, perhaps the antagonist as well. Usually, entering this phase, both the protagonist and the antagonist have a plan to win against the other. Now for the first time we see them going against one another in direct, or nearly direct, conflict.This struggle results with neither character completely winning, nor losing, against the other. Usually, each character's plan is partially successful, and partially foiled by their adversary. What is unique about this central struggle between the two characters is that the protagonist makes a decision which shows us one's moral quality, and ultimately determines one's fate. In a tragedy, the protagonist here makes a bad decision, which is one's miscalculation and the appearance of one's tragic flaw.The climax often contains much of the action in a story, for example, a defining battle.HPDH – Final battle
the loose ends are being tied up. However, it is often the time of greatest overall tension in the play, because it is the phase in which everything goes most wrong.In this phase, the villain has the upper hand. It seems that evil will triumph. The protagonist has never been further from accomplishing the goal. For Freytag, this is true both in tragedies and comedies, because both of these types of play classically show good winning over evil. The question is which side the protagonist has put himself on, and this may not be immediately clear to the audience.
there is a final confrontation between the protagonist and antagonist, where one or the other decisively wins. This phase is the story of that confrontation, of what leads up to it, of why it happens the way it happens, what it means, and what its long-term consequences are.
What makes a story a story
What makes a story a story
What makes a story a story
What makes a story a story
What makes a story a story
What makes a story a story
There are three basic types that we will be using for our reading and writing.
Have you ever had a conflict with yourself?Are there any decisions you regret? Are you haunted by what ifs and what could have beens?
Of course, it doesn’t have to be literally two men. It may involve women, a woman and a man, and it doesn’t have to be people. It just has to be two different characters in a story.
It is more than likely that you’ve experienced this type of conflict in your life at least once. Have you had one today? I know I have.
Athletes competing against each otherSpeakers, politicians, debaters trying to outwit one another
The conflict is always part of a __ __ __ __ [plot]
This diagram shows how a story evolves and develops to make things interesting
In a tub, your physical capabilities are restricted, in lay man’s terms, you don’t have much room to move.