Memory THE ELEMENTS OF STORY TELLINGVersion en ligne Based on the book The Telling and the Tale Narrative Creative Writing par Ana Gabriela Hernández Salazar Falling action Theme Omniscient point of view A fictitious being easily visualized by the reader because the writer has provided him or her with a number of qualities and traits; a complex character Setting A relatively brief narrative written in prose usually used to categorize a subgenre of fiction Perspective Stock character The struggle or tension between two or more opposing forces in a narrative. Static character A character who does not experience significant changes within the narrative The part of a plot that develops the conflict to the point of crisis The perspective from which a narrative is told The main character of a literary work A category into which literary works are classified according to form, technique, and conventions. Examples of modern genre are novel, essay, and short story Protagonist Round character A term used to refer to the point of greatest tension in the development of a narrative Plot. It is the point at which a crisis is reached (concerning the conflict) and after which at least some degree of resolution is achieved. It is also referred to as a crisis. Rising action Climax A the central or dominating idea or statement about life that is presented either explicitly or implicitly in a literary work. Third person point of view Plot Chronological order A type of telling using an all-knowing narrator who has total control of the telling and knows everything about all the characters events and situations Short story Genre A character who presents a single or very limited number of traits these characters are also called one-dimensional characters. In narratology, the position from which a narrative is told or perceived. This position is always inevitably subjective and can be inferred from choices of language use and context. Flat character The receiver of a written text considered by some theorists to be a co-author of the text Dynamic A narrative technique that shows how a given character’s mind works by means of reproducing the flow of thought, recollections and sensations of a character. It uses disruptions of time and disjointed images Antagonist A kind of telling in which the narrator presents a story from the perspective of only one character (or, less frequently, two) with access only to what that character says thinks hears and feels A character who changes during the course of a literary work. The change maybe physical psychological and/or behavioral. A term that refers to the structured sequence of events in a narrative The time and place in which a narrative takes place. It includes references to time and location as well as intangible aspect such as social values norms beliefs and so forth The order in which events occur according to the time at which they happened in narrative. This order is often changed by the narrator. Conflict Reader Limited omniscient point of view A kind of literary character which is immediately familiar and recognizable to readers such as the brave hero, the naïve maiden, the evil stepmother, and so forth Point of view When a narrative is told by voice that uses the pronoun “she” or “he”. This type of perspective supposedly provides the narrative with considerable objectivity because it establishes a distance between the narration and the character. A character who opposes a protagonist The actions that follow the climax and lead to a resolution of a plot Stream of consciousness