Creative Non-Fiction Literary Genres "Genre" Is A Particular Style or Type of Writing. Most Common Genres
Creative Non-Fiction Literary Genres "Genre" Is A Particular Style or Type of Writing. Most Common Genres
CREATIVE NON-FICTION
Literary Genres
Fiction Nonfiction
1. Fiction
• The elements of fictions are the following: plot; point of view; character; setting;
tone and atmosphere; symbol and irony; and theme and meaning.
2. Poetry
• According to Laurence Perrine, “poetry might be defined as a kind of language
that says more and says it more intensely than does ordinary language.”
3. Drama
• A drama or play is a script that is meant to be staged. There are five elements of
drama namely situation, character, dialogue, plot, and style.
What is Non-Fiction?
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
2|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
• Personal Essays
• Memoir
• Travel Writing
• Food Writing
• Biography
• Literary Journalism
• Other hybridized essays
1. Literal Language
• It means exactly what it says. It is factual and does not involve fashioning or
fabricating.
2. Figurative Language
• It is like a word painted to make us see something that literal language would not
make us see.
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
3|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
✓ Tying a Knot
✓ Green Thumb
Fact. The writing must be based on fact, rather than fiction. It cannot be made up.
Personal experience and personal opinion. Often, the writer includes personal
experience, feelings, thoughts, and opinions. For instance, when writing a personal essay
or memoir.
Essay format. Creative nonfiction is often written in essay format. Example: Personal
Essay, Literary Journalistic essay, brief essay.
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
4|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
• The writer constructs a personal essay, memoir, and so forth, that is based on
personal experience. He also writes about real people and true events.
• After gathering information, the writer needs to analyze and assess what he/she
has collected. He then must evaluate it and express his thoughts, views, opinions.
Personal opinion is permissible and encouraged.
• The writer needs to conduct research to learn about the topic. The writer also
needs to complete research to discover what has been written about the topic.
• Reading while conducting research is not sufficient. The writer must read the work
of the masters of his profession.
• Writing creative nonfiction is both an art and craft. The art of creative nonfiction
requires that the writer uses his talents, instincts, creative abilities, and imagination
to write memorable creative nonfiction.
The following are 12 guidelines for writing any type of creative nonfiction:
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
5|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
6. Show the reader what happened, don’t tell them what happened. To do this,
dramatize the story.
7. Narrate the story. A story has an inciting incident, goal, conflict, challenges,
obstacles, climax, and resolution.
8. Write about the interesting and extraordinary. Write about personal
experiences, interesting people, extraordinary events, or provide a unique
perspective on everyday life.
9. Organize the information. Two common techniques are chronological or logical
order.
10. Use literary devices to tell the story. Choose language that stimulates and
entertains the reader, such as simile, metaphor, imagery.
11. Introduce the essay or other work with a hook. Its purpose is to grab the
readers’ attention and compel them to reader further. Popular hooks include a
quotation, question, or thought-provoking fact.
12. End the creative nonfiction piece with a final, important point. Otherwise the
reader will think, “So what!” “What was the point? It was an interesting story, but
how does it apply to me or my life?”
PLOT
• The story line, the sequence of actions or events that gives direction to the story
as a whole. When you study plot, you focus on what drives, motivates, or shapes
the story.
• It is a sequence of events that has beginning, middle, and an end. It is a pattern of
actions, events, and situations showing the development of the narrative.
• The plot of creative nonfiction is based on actual people, experiences, and events
as they actually happened.
• While in fiction, the characters are a product of the fictionist’s creative imagination
or can be based on real experiences and events or on real people who inhabit a
fictional world.
Exposition
• At the beginning of the story, characters, setting, and the main conflict are typically
introduced.
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
6|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
• The main character is in crisis and events leading up to facing the conflict begin to
unfold. The story becomes complicated.
Climax
• At the peak of the story, a major event occurs in which the main character faces a
major enemy, fear, challenge, or other source of conflict.
Falling Action
• The story begins to slow down and work towards its end.
Resolution or Denouement
• It is like a concluding paragraph that resolves any remaining issues and ends the
story.
CHARACTERIZATION
Character
What would the character say and the manner by which the character would say it?
Where does the character live and what kind of surrounding or environment is it?
• It refers to the narrator of the story, the vantage point from where the readers
observe the events of the story, or the writer’s special angle of vision, the one
whose perspective is told.
• The first person pronouns include I, me, my, mine, myself, we, us, our, and
ourselves.
✓ I think I lost my wallet! I can’t find it anywhere!
✓ We are proud of what Gazini Ganados finished in Miss Universe 2019 pageant.
• The second person point of view belongs to the person or people being addressed.
It includes you, your, yours, yourself, yourselves pronouns.
✓ You should be proud of yourselves for finishing this project!
✓ You are not the kind of guy who would be at a place like this at this time of the
morning.
• The third person pronouns include he, him, his, himself, she, her, hers, herself, it,
its, itself, they, them, their, theirs, and themselves.
✓ Tiffany used her prize money from the science fair to buy herself a new
microscope.
✓ John always hated school.
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
8|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
Settings
• It refers to the place and time where and when an event happens.
Atmosphere
SYMBOLISM
FIGURES OF SPEECH
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City
9|Page Introduction to Creative Non -Fiction
Irony - It expresses one’s meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite.
• The best part about music class is that you can bang on the drum.
• Both bees and buzzers buzz.
• If you want the red team to win, clap your hands right now!
Adapted and modified from Mr. Kyle Aris Dayvid D. Roño, L.P.T.
Other Source:
Aguila et. al. (2017), Telling the Truth The Art of Creative Nonfiction, C&E Publishing Inc., Quezon City
Moratilla et. al. (2016), Creative Nonfiction A textbook on Humanities and Social Sciences, Phoenix Publishing House, Quezon City
Gallo et. al. (2017), Grammar Essentials Creative Nonfiction, Sibs Publishing House Inc., Quezon City