F.Y.B.A. (ENG)
SEM : 1
DSC : 101 (PROSE)
PLOT.
There is a plot in
every story. It is the series of events or incidents that make up a story.
These events or situations are linked because one thing occurs as a result of
another. A well-crafted storyline would include conflict between individuals,
groups, the individual and forces like as nature, society, and so on. Surprise
and intrigue would also be present. Above all, the plot must be continuous;
each event must follow logically from the previous one.
The plot is the
sequence of events in a story or play; it is how the author arranges events to
develop his core idea. The plot is a prearranged logical sequence of events
with a beginning, middle, and end. Short stories usually have a single plot and
may be read in one sitting.
According to Aristotle,
the order of a unified plot is a continuous sequence of beginning, middle, and
end. A Plot is a sequence of events in a work in which the hero and heroine are
meant to be together but get stopped by anything. Whatever is keeping them
apart is removed from the balance during the course of the story, usually after
a lot of raising misunderstanding and miscommunication, which usually ends in
huge humour.
Misinterpretations
worsen the problem. Characters get increasingly isolated. The truth will eventually
be revealed. Misconceptions are corrected. The characters' views change. Love
and understanding help in the recovery of a relationship. The mystery is
finally discovered, the terrible man is punished, and everyone marries.
Plot has five
fundamental components:
1.
Introduction - The story's opening, when the characters and setting are
introduced.
2.
Rising Action - This is where the story's events become complex and the
conflict becomes visible (events between the introduction and the climax).
3.
Climax - This is the story's most interesting and crucial point. The
reader is interested in what happens next; will the conflict be resolved?
4.
Falling action - The events and complications begin to resolve
themselves. The reader understands what happened next and whether or not the
conflict was resolved (events between the climax and the denouement).
5. Denouement - This
is the story's final outcome or untangling of events. It is beneficial to
extract new information from the main character.
The time and location in which a story takes place is called the setting. Each story is set in a particular time and place. The author can either tell the story in a chronological sequence or may start at the end and keep going back and forth in time. Place is equally important and one can try to identify the details that form part of the setting of the story. The next point is to try and discover how the author has tried to use setting in order to heighten the effect of the story.
Setting refers not just to place, time, and event, but also to tradition, characters, social behaviours, and people's perspectives at the time the narrative is written. Setting, according to Aminuddin, is the backdrop events in the literature such as place, time, event, and fiscal and psychological function. A story's background or backdrop is something that defines a place or circumstance. The atmosphere that surrounds a story event, the world that interacts with what is happening, is referred to as the setting. Having set hours (day, month, and year), weather, or a historical period can also be used as background. For example, in horror stories, the setting is usually a dark ancient castle or a bleak graveyard. Thus setting contributes to the atmosphere or mood of the story.
For some stories, the setting is very important, while for others it is not. There are several aspects of a story's setting to consider when examining how setting contributes to a story (some, or all, may be present in a story):
1. Place - geographical location. Where is the action of the story taking place
2. Time - When is the story taking place? (historical period, time of day, year, etc)

3. Weather conditions - Is it rainy, sunny, stormy, etc?
4. Social conditions - What is the daily life of the character's like? Does the story contain local color (writing that focuses on the speech, dress, mannerisms, customs, etc. of a particular place)?
5. Mood or atmosphere - What feeling is created at the beginning of the story? Is it bright and cheerful or dark and frightening?
CHARACTERIZATION.
Characterization
is the
act of creating and describing characters in literature. Characterization includes both descriptions of a character's physical
attributes as well as the character's personality. The way that characters act,
think, and speak also adds to their characterization.
There are two
meanings for the word character:
1. Persons in a work of
fiction. Short stories use few characters. One character is clearly central
to the story with all major events having some importance to this character -
he/she is the protagonist. The opposer of the main character is called the
antagonist.
2. The Characteristics of a
Person. In order for a story to seem real to the reader its characters must
seem real. Characterization is the information the author gives the reader
about the characters themselves.
In short fiction, the writer can employ two methods:
Direct characterization or indirect
characterization.
Direct
Characterization: The
writer tells the reader about the character’s personality using the narrator of
the story, another character, or the main character revealing aspects about
himself/herself.
Indirect
Characterization: The
writer reveals to the reader what the character’s personality through the
thoughts, feeling, and actions of the character.
The author may reveal a character
in several ways:
his/her physical appearance
what he/she says, thinks, feels
and dreams
what he/she does or does not do
what others say about him/her and
how others react to him/her
Characters are
convincing if they are: consistent, motivated, and life-like (resemble real
people)
Type of Characters
are...
Individual - round, many sided and complex
personalities.
Developing - Dynamic, many sided
personalities that change, for better or worse, by the end of the story.
Static - Stereotype, have one or two
characteristics that never change and are emphasized e.g. brilliant detective,
drunk, scrooge, cruel stepmother, etc.







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