+ All Categories
Home > Education > Short Story Lecture Notes

Short Story Lecture Notes

Date post: 07-Nov-2014
Category:
Upload: beth-ritter-guth
View: 2,666 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
These are notes for students at OHA.
Popular Tags:
15

Click here to load reader

Transcript
Page 1: Short Story Lecture Notes

Questions for Exploring Short Stories

Beth Ritter-Guth, InstructorOak Hill Academy

Road to Independence ProjectSpring 2012

Page 2: Short Story Lecture Notes

Mode

• Is the story:– Comic– Pathetic– Tragic– Satiric– Elegiac– Didactic

Page 3: Short Story Lecture Notes

Narrator

• Who is the narrator?• Is the narrator also a character?

• What role does the narrator play in the development of the plot?

• Do we trust the narrator?

Page 4: Short Story Lecture Notes

Background• How does the story start?• What happened before the story started?

• Where does the reader “land” in the story?

• How do we learn this background?• Is the delivery of this background important to the plot of the story?

Page 5: Short Story Lecture Notes

Characters• Who are the main characters? • How are they introduced in the story?• When are they introduced?• What do we know about these characters?

• What do we need to know about them?• Do they fit any archetypal patterns?

Page 6: Short Story Lecture Notes

Character and Setting• What time period is the story set?• Do the characters behave according to the standards of time and location?

• What do we need to understand about the time period, customs, language, mores, habits, and traditions of the culture or time period?

Page 7: Short Story Lecture Notes

Characterization?• How are the major characters drawn? What are their major strengths? Weaknesses? Are they active? Passive?

• How to the characters function in relationship to one another?

• How do the minor characters work with the major characters?

• Do we trust the characters? Why or why not?

Page 8: Short Story Lecture Notes

Action, Speech, Ideas• How to characters present their ideas?

• How is speech crafted to provide characterization?

• Which is more important to the character - actions or speech?

• Does the reader “get inside the head of” any character?

• Do the characters change (for better or worse) during the story?

Page 9: Short Story Lecture Notes

Setting• How does the author address setting?• Is the setting described in full or is it implied?

• What role does the setting play in the plot/action of the story.

• How does the setting establish mood?• Does the setting impact character development?

Page 10: Short Story Lecture Notes

Plot• Is the plot of the story the most meaningful part of the story? If not, what is?

• Is there anything missing in the plot? Is this element missing on purpose?

• Are there any inconsistencies in the plot? Are these intentional?

• How does memory play a role in the development of the plot? Do we trust these memories?

Page 11: Short Story Lecture Notes

Organization of Plot• Is the story organized thematically or chronologically?

• Would the outcome be different if the events happened differently?

• What are the motivations of the major and minor characters?

Page 12: Short Story Lecture Notes

Theme• Is this story didactic?• What is the point of the story - to inform, persuade, or entertain?

• How does the plot establish the theme?

• How do the characters function in relationship to the theme?

• What value statements are implied by the theme?

Page 13: Short Story Lecture Notes

Symbols• Are symbols used in the story?• Do the characters recognize the symbols, or are the symbols used for the benefit of the reader only?

• Do these symbols add meaning? Why, or why not?

• Are there major and minor symbols?• Are the symbols archetypal?

Page 14: Short Story Lecture Notes

Reality and Believability

• Is this story believable or fantastical?

• Does the story need to be believable to achieve the overall effect or impact of the story?

• How does the plot function in believability?

• Are the characters believable?• Is the setting realistic? Does it need to be realistic?

Page 15: Short Story Lecture Notes

Critical Theory• How would a Feminist react to this story?

• How would a New Critic react to this story?

• How would a Deconstructionist react to this story?

• How would a Psychoanalytic critic react to this story?

• How would an Ecocritic react to the story?


Recommended