Lesson 4 Elements of Short Stories
Lesson 4 Elements of Short Stories
ELEMENTS
in Short Story, Novel,
and Drama
Prepared by:
CHRISTINE IÑEZ A. PADLAN
Plot Moral
Allusion Point of View
Flashback Suspense
Foreshadowing Symbol
Imagery Theme
Irony Tone
Mood Character
PLOT
the conflict reaches a height and may turn for the better or
for the worse
Resolution/Falling Action
conflict is solved
Conclusion/Denouement
Ron and Hermione are NOT Harry Potter's sidekicks. They are strong characters who have fully
developed personalities and play important roles in the entire story.
Remember that a sidekick will not really have any strong role to play in the story.
UNDERDOG
The underdog is a character who is often underplayed in a book[ someone who is
the scapegoat or who all bets would be placed against in any given situation.
The underdog character taps into hope in the audience. We want the underdog to
succeed and to better him- or herself.
Underdogs may be cheated, abused, or otherwise mistreated, but they believe in
their God-given ability to affect their own destiny. They actively take
responsibility for their actions and believe they have the power to change their
tomorrows by what they do today. A classic underdog in literature is Cinderella.
Example:
Flat characters have few but easily recognizable traits that make them
stereotypical. For instance, the stepmother who humiliates her stepdaughter,
the school bully, the mean teacher, or the mother who is only focused on
having her daughter married, are all flat characters.
They do not have much of a personality. Flat characters are also referred to
as two-dimensional characters or static characters.
Example:
Dynamic characters tend to be more fully developed and described than flat
characters. Both the protagonist and the antagonist can be dynamic characters.
A number of elements in fiction make the character dynamic, including
descriptions of a character, the character's dialogue, a character's responses to the
conflicts that arise in the plot, and a character's thoughts.
Sometimes a dynamic character is called a developing character.
Example:
“Hey! Guess who the new Newton of our school is?” – “Newton”, means a
genius student, alludes to a famous scientist Isaac Newton.
The rise in poverty will unlock the Pandora’s box of crimes. – This is an
allusion to one of Greek Mythology’s origin myth, “Pandora’s box”.
FLASHBACK
It refers to an interruption of the chronological sequence to give way to an event
that had occurred earlier.
the entire scene is shifted to an earlier time by means of recollections of a
character, the narrator’s commentary dream episode
Writers do to insert past events, in order to provide background or context to the
current events of a narrative. By using flashbacks, writers allow their readers to
gain insight into a character’s motivations, and provide a background to a
current conflict. Dream sequences and memories are methods used to present
flashbacks.
FORESHADOWING
A literary device in which a writer gives an advance hint of what is to come
later in the story. Foreshadowing often appears at the beginning of a story, or a
chapter, and helps the reader develop expectations about the coming events in a
story.
A writer may use character dialogues to hint at what may occur in the future. In
addition, any event or action in the story may throw a hint to the readers about
future events or actions. Even a title of a work or a chapter title can act as a clue
that suggests what is going to happen. Foreshadowing in fiction creates
an atmosphere of suspense in a story, so that the readers are interested to know
more.
Examples:
#1 The final graveyard flower is blooming, and its smell drifts through their
house, speaking gently the names of their dead. - Foreshadows death
a writer’s use of words and phrases that create vivid sensory experiences for
the reader
also refers to the process of generating mental pictures or movies
IRONY
It refers to the discrepancy between what seems and what is, or
the way something appears and what is actually true
It is classified into three (3):
1. Verbal Irony
2. Dramatic Irony
3. Irony of Situation
VERBAL IRONY
#3 A husband realizes it's his wife's birthday and rushes to make dinner
reservations, only to find that she has forgotten what day it is and stayed at work
late.
The husband expected to treat his wife, by the plans end up ruined anyway. It's
only the reason why that's unexpected.
MOOD
The opening scene occurs as the watchmen are changing guard. Their discussion
is about a ghost they saw the previous night. And, just as they are discussing, the
ghost itself appears.
Here, Shakespeare utilizes diction, setting, and tone to create an ominous mood.
He appropriately sets the stage for his tragedy, providing relevant background
information, including the ghost of the murdered king, pulling in his audience and
inciting fear and mystery.
MORAL
Example:
Crime does not pay
POINT OF VIEW…
It refers to the position of the narrator in the story in relation to the events
that he/she is recounting.
POINT OF VIEW
is also a third-person narrator, a disembodied voice, but one that has access to
the inner thoughts of only one character and focuses on the experiences and
perceptions of that single character, sometimes a character in the thick of the
story’s action, sometimes one on the periphery, more observer than actor.
OBJECTIVE NARRATOR
a third person narrator that describes characters from the outside only, never
revealing their thoughts. Since readers want and need to know what characters
are thinking, the burden on this kind of “fly-on-the-wall” narrator, as it is
often called, is to describe characters’ appearance, speech, and actions in a
way that enables us to infer their thoughts.
An objective narrator is sometimes also called a dramatic narrator, since
dialogue—what characters say—often becomes, as in drama, the key element
in revealing their thoughts.
PARTICIPANT NARRATOR
is a character in the story as well as the teller of the story. Such a narrator
describes a fictional world of which he or she is a part and therefore, says
“I.”
This “I” may be central to the action, or may be a minor character, more
witness than actor. Like the limited omniscient narrator, the first-person
participant narrator enters into the mind of only one character, himself or
herself.
SUSPENSE
Sentence 1]
“I want to ask the authorities what is the big deal? Why do they not control the
epidemic? It is eating up lives like a monster.”
Sentence #2]
“I want to draw the attention of the appropriate authorities toward damage caused
by the epidemic. If steps are not taken to curb it, it will further injure
our community.”
The theme of both tone examples is the same. The only way we can
differentiate between them is their separate tone. The tone in the first example is
casual or informal while, it is more formal in the second.
Example:
Sentence 1]
“Yeah, your grades on this exam will be as good as the previous exams.”
Sentence #2]
“Can someone tell me what the hell is going on here?”
Frost tells us about his past with a “sigh,” this gives the above lines an
unhappy tone. This tone leads us into thinking that the speaker in the poem had to
make a difficult choice.