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Character Interactions

Date post: 22-Feb-2016
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Character Interactions. Feature Menu. Connecting with Characters Main Characters Subordinate Characters Flat Characters versus Round Characters Dynamic Characters versus Static Characters Conflict Motivation Practice. Connecting with Characters. What draws readers into a story?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Connecting with Characters Main Characters Subordinate Characters Flat Characters versus Round Characters Dynamic Characters versus Static Charac ters Conflict Motivation Practice Character Interactions Feature Menu
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Page 1: Character Interactions

Connecting with CharactersMain CharactersSubordinate CharactersFlat Characters versus Round CharactersDynamic Characters versus Static CharactersConflictMotivationPractice

Character Interactions

Feature Menu

Page 2: Character Interactions

What draws readers into a story?

Connecting with Characters

Vivid, complex characters whose problems and triumphs draw forth our emotions and reveal some truth about humankind.

[End of Section]

Page 3: Character Interactions

• The action of the story revolves around the protagonist and the conflict he or she faces.

Main Characters

Protagonist—the main character of a story.

Antagonist—the character or force the protagonist struggles against and must overcome.

[End of Section]

Page 4: Character Interactions

Subordinate characters add depth and complication to the plot.

Subordinate Characters

Main character

Friends

[End of Section]

Page 5: Character Interactions

Flat characters• have only one or two

character traits that can be described in a few words

Flat Characters versus Round Characters

• have no depth, like a piece of cardboard

Page 6: Character Interactions

Round characters• have many different

character traits that sometimes contradict each other

Flat Characters versus Round Characters

• are much like real people, with several sides to their personality

[End of Section]

Page 7: Character Interactions

Dynamic characters• change or grow as a result of the story’s

actions

Dynamic Characters versus Static Characters

• learn something about themselves, other people, or the world as they struggle to resolve their conflicts

The changes that a dynamic character undergoes contribute to the meaning of the story.

Page 8: Character Interactions

Static characters• do not change or grow

Dynamic Characters versus Static Characters

• are the same at the end of a story as they were in the beginning

Subordinate characters are often static characters.

[End of Section]

Page 9: Character Interactions

External conflict—struggle between a character and an outside force.• character versus character

Conflict

• character versus society• character versus nature

Page 10: Character Interactions

Conflict

Internal conflict—struggle between opposing needs or desires or emotions within a character. • character versus himself• character versus herself

Page 11: Character Interactions

What type of conflict does the character face?

Conflict

Quick Check“Y’all git some stones,”

commanded Joey now and was met with instant giggling obedience as everyone except me began to gather pebbles from the dusty ground. “Come on, Lizabeth.”

I just stood there peering through the bushes, torn between wanting to join the fun and feeling that it was a bit silly.

from “Marigolds” by Eugenia W. Collier[End of Section]

Page 12: Character Interactions

Motivation—what drives a character’s actions. It

Motivation

• explains behaviors

• is often based on character’s fears, conflicts, needs

Motivation can be inferred by observing characters’ behavior, speech, actions.

• reveals personality

[End of Section]

Page 13: Character Interactions

Think of a story you’ve read in which the protagonist faces powerful conflicts. Use a chart like the one here to map out the conflicts and their resolutions, as well as the protagonist’s motivations.

Practice

Protagonist•

Motivation•

Internal Conflict•

Resolution•

Motivation•

External conflict and antagonist• Resolution•

[End of Section]

Page 14: Character Interactions

The End


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