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CNF Lesson 2

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CREATIVE NON-FICTION 12

Literary Devices, Elements & Techniques

Literary devices
 Are common structures in writing that make up the components of literature.
 The names of literary devices may also be called literary terms. Literary devices
include both literary elements and literary techniques.

Literary elements
 Are the essential parts of storytelling that are found in almost all types of
literary and narrative writing.

Literary Elements
1. Plot
 The plot is how the author arranges events to develop his basic idea. It is
the sequence of events in a story or play. The plot is a planned, logical series
of events having a beginning, middle, and end.
 The short story usually has one plot so it can be read in one sitting. There
are five essential parts to the plot: introduction, rising action, climax, falling
action, and resolution.

 Five Essential Parts to the Plot


a) Introduction - The beginning of the story where the characters and the
setting are revealed. The introduction can also be called the exposition.
b) Rising Action - This is the part of the story was a conflict is revealed
(called the inciting force) and becomes more pronounced as the story
progresses. The rising action is all the events between the introduction
and the climax.
c) Climax - This is the highest point of interest, the turning point of the
story or the moment of greatest suspense. The reader wonders what will
happen next; will the conflict be resolved or not.
d) Resolution - This is the final outcome or untangling of events in the
story. The resolution may also be called the denouement.
2. Character
 The plot can only exist with characters. The main character is placed in a
situation that contains a problem he or she must overcome; therefore,
conflict exists.
 Most stories also have minor characters that either help or hinder the main
character's attempt to solve the conflict. There can be many different types
of characters within a story.

 Types of Characters
a) Protagonist - The main or central character.
b) Antagonist - This character opposes the protagonist. Often, he or she is
an opponent to the main character.
c) Round (Dynamic) Characters - A character affected by the events of the
story. These characters are usually fully developed in terms of
personality. They are described in more detail and their personalities
emerge more fully. Round characters usually become enlightened, learn,
grow, or deteriorate by the end of the story.
d) Flat Character - A character who doesn't go through a change. These
characters are usually one-dimensional.
e) Stereotyped Characters - A character who is so well known that little has
to be said about him/her. These characters are immediately recognizable
because of the role he/she plays. Examples - the strong silent gunfighter,
the nerd, the beautiful international spy, the mad scientist.

 We Learn About a Character in 5 Different Ways:


What the character says.
What the character thinks.
What the character does.
What is said about him or her by other characters and the narrator.
What the author says about the character.

3. Conflicts
 Conflict is essential to plot. Without conflict, there is no plot. Conflict does
not involve just arguments, but rather it is any form of opposition that faces
the main character.
 Within a short story there may be only one central struggle, or there may be
one dominant struggle with many minor ones. Conflicts can either be
internal or external.

 Types of Conflict
a) External - A struggle with a force outside one's self.
b) Internal - A struggle within the character’s self.

 There are 4 Different Types of Conflicts:


a) Character vs. Person - The leading character struggles with his or her
physical strength against other characters, forces of nature, or animals.
b) Character vs. Circumstances - The leading character struggles against fate,
or the circumstances of life facing him/her.
c) Character vs. Society - The leading character struggles against ideas,
practices, or customs of other people.
d) Character vs. Self - The leading character struggles with himself/herself;
with his/her own soul, ideas of right or wrong, physical limitations,
choices, etc.
4. Setting
 The time (when) and location (where) in which a story takes place is called
the setting. For some stories the setting is very important, while for others it
is not. There are several aspects of a story's setting to consider when
examining how setting contributes to a story (some, or all, of these aspects
may be present in a story).
A. Place - Geographical location. Where is the action of the story
taking place?
B. Time - When is the story taking place? (historical period, time of
day, year,)
C. Weather conditions - Is it rainy, sunny, stormy, etc?
D. Social conditions – What is the character's daily life like? Is the
character influenced by particular customs or mannerisms of a place?
E. Mood or atmosphere - What feeling is created at the beginning of the
story? Is it bright and cheerful or dark and frightening?

5. Theme
 A theme is the author's underlying meaning, message or main idea that he is
trying to convey. Themes often explore timeless and universal ideas and
may be implied rather than stated explicitly. The title of the story usually
points to the theme.
 Some examples of themes from literature include:
- Things are not always as they appear to be
- Love is blind
- Believe in yourself
- People are afraid of change
- Don't judge a book by its cover
6. Point of View
 Point of view is the angle from which the story is told. Although every story
has a point of view, the type used is up to the author. The person or voice
telling the story is called the narrator and there are two common ways to tell
a short story:

1. First person narration - The story is told by the protagonist or


another character who is part of the action (using I, me, we, etc).
2. Third person narration - The story is told by someone who is not part
of the action (using he, she, it, they etc).

 A narrator, 1st or 3rd person, can be:


1. Limited narration - The narrator only knows what he/she experiences or
learns about in some way - the narrator's knowledge grows as the story
unfolds; at times, the reader may know more than the narrator.
2. Omniscient narration - The "all knowing" narrator knows all of the details
about events, characters, etc. and reveals them to the reader as the story
unfolds.

Prepared by:

Shendy M. Acosta
Subject Teacher

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