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Elements of a Short Story
A Short Story is a brief narrative that contains a SINGLE plot, a
SINGLE protagonist, and a SINGLE main conflict to be
resolved.
In Brief: Plot
The “plot” of a story is the logical linking of one event to the next
Done properly, a plot should help to build tension within a story, engaging the reader’s interest, and heightening their excitement in the story
In Brief: Characters
A story may (or may not) contain a huge number of characters serving different roles within the narrative. A Short Story MUST however have the following:
A main character – called a Protagonist
A source of conflict – called an Antagonist
Other characters or friends of the protagonist – called a confidante
In Brief: TAP & Tone
A Story must include a setting, to firmly give it a place in the reader’s imagination. This is called TAP
T – Time
A – Atmosphere
P – Place
TONE is the emotional content of the words the author uses
In Brief: Conflict
Conflict is the engine which powers your story forward. A story without conflict has no momentum, no sense that events are moving towards something. Conflict can take many forms, most commonly:
Man vs Man
Man vs Himself
Man vs Nature
Man vs Society
The Plot Graph (Freytag’s Pyramid)
Crisis
The Plot of your own story can be easily arranged into a Plot Graph. This helps to engage the reader by building the tension of a story in a predictable way. A plot graph will contain seven major moments, with specific story points that occur at each
The Beginning (Exposition)
The first lines of your story
Depending on the author’s style, this may be several words to several paragraphs in length
The SETTING is described, and the PROTAGONIST is introduced
…but nothing is happening, and our reader is quickly losing interest!
1
Inciting Force
Our source of conflict (also called the ANTAGONIST is encountered.
The growing tension between Protagonist and Antagonist will be the tool that holds our reader’s attention
1 2
Rising Action
As our Protagonist and Antagonist continue to have conflict, the tension must continue to rise
This helps the story build it’s emotion and intensity towards a predictable and satisfying conclusion
12
3
Crisis (The Point of No Return)
•Eventually, the conflict will build to a moment where our Protagonist and Antagonist must meet, and the conflict must be resolved once and for all
•This is called the Crisis, the point of no return for our characters
12
3
4
Climax
The highest point of tension within a story
The final showdown between our Protagonist and Antagonist. One way or another, the conflict must be resolved here
1 2
3
45
Falling Action
Our conflict has been resolved! However, if we end the story here, we risk alienating our reader
As we have built up the tension, we must now ease down the intensity, and tie up loose ends
3
45
6
Resolution
The end of the story. If a twist ending is to be inserted, it must be placed at this point (and not sooner)
5
67
Flashbacks
The system works in most situations, however it will not work in a story that makes use of repeated flashbacks, or flashforwards