Short Story Elements and
Terms
A short story is … a brief fictional narrative in prose
Very brief story—it’s only a few pages!
The essence of the short story is “ the plot ” …….
Parts of the plot are: Exposition
Conflict
Rising Action
Climax
Falling Action
Resolution / Denouement
A plot is the sequence of events in a narrative work.
PLOT CHART / DIAGRAM
Exposition Conflict
Rising
Acti
on
Falling Action
Resolution / Denouement
Climax
Definitions for parts of the plot:
Resolution / Denouement: the final outcome
Exposition: introduction of characters, setting, & situation
Conflict: a struggle between opposing forces
Rising action: complications that occur in trying to resolve the conflict
Climax: the emotional high point of the story
Falling action: the logical consequences of the climax
Conflict can be internal or external.
Internal – a character’s struggle within himself; torn between opposing feelings or different courses of action (psychological)
External – a character’s
struggle with an outside force
Types of external conflict:
character vs. another character
character vs. society
character vs. nature
character vs. machine
character vs. supernatural being
social
metaphysical
physical
What Do We Mean by the Theme of a Story?
The theme is the author’s message about his/her perception about life or human nature.
The theme of a literary work can be stated or implied.
Protagonist – the main character
Antagonist – the character/force in conflict with the protagonist.
CharactersCharacters are the actors in a
story’s plot.
Types of Characters
Stock or Stereotyped – flat character that is “typical” and often repeated.
Dynamic – changes attitude in the course of the story; gains new understanding or insight
Static – remains the same throughout the story
Flat – has only one personality trait
Round – has varied & different personality traits
Characterization
Direct characterization – when the author tells the reader about the character’s traits directly
Indirect characterization – when the author reveals a character’s personality through the character’s words, thoughts, actions, appearance, and reaction of other characters.
…. is the method the author uses to reveal a character’s personality
Point of View is the voice the author uses to tell his story.
Third-person objective (he/she) – narrator is outside the story; reveals only actions & speech; no thoughts or feelings
First-person (I, me, my) – narrator is a character in the story; reader sees everything through the character
Third-person limited (he/she) – narrator outside the story; reveals thoughts and feelings of just one character
Third-person omniscient (he/she) – narrator outside the story; reveals thoughts and feelings of all characters; “all-knowing”
Foreshadowing
…is the use of clues that give hints so that the reader can predict what will happen.
Irony is the difference between what appears to be real and
what is actually real in a story.
Dramatic Irony – difference between what the reader knows and what the character knows. The reader has more or better information than the character.
Verbal Irony – difference between what a speaker says and what he means
Situational Irony – difference between what the reader expects to happen and what actually happens
Other definitions ….
Tone – the author’s attitude about the subject of the literary work.
Symbolism – when an object, person, place or experience represents something else that is abstract
Diction – the author’s choice of words
Denotation – a word’s literal or dictionary definition
Connotation – a word’s implied / emotional meaning
Other definitions …
Other examples:- Keep an eye out. - Right on the money
- Flat broke - Dodge a bullet
Idiom – an accepted expression having a meaning different from the literal.
Examples: I was so angry I was beside myself. (“Beside myself” is idiomatic because it is physically impossible to be next to oneself).
Other Definitions …
Allusion – a reference to a literary, mythological, or historical person place or thing.
Oxymoron – a form of paradox that combines a pair of opposite terms into a single unusual expression; a seeming contradiction.
Examples: a wise fool, definitely maybe, precise estimate, genuine imitation, honest politician
Alliteration – occurs when several neighboring words begin with the same consonant sound.
Example: Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers…
Other Definitions …
Inversion is a sentence where the predicate comes before the subject.Example: Long did the hours seem while I waited for her knock at the door.
Natural order of a sentence: the subject comes before the predicate.
Other Definitions …
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Parallel Structure (parallelism) – a grammatical or structural similarity between sentences or parts of a sentence.
Example: The burden must be carried, the want provided for, the suffering endured, the responsibility fulfilled.
Archetype – a character, action, or situation that is a prototype or pattern of human life occurring over and over again in literature.
Example: the damsel in distress, the rags-to-riches plot, the quest.
Other Definitions …
Motif – a pattern of imagery or symbolism in a work of literature.
Epiphany – the sudden understanding in which a character proceeds from ignorance and innocence to knowledge and experience.
Suspense – the quality that makes the reader uncertain or tense about the outcome of events.
Keep these
Short Story Elements
and Terms