Exposition Starts the story by giving background information
• Exposition: Starts the story by giving background information, describing the setting and characters. Gives basic information needed to understand the rest of the story. • Rising action: series of conflicts and/or crisis in the story that lead to the climax. • Climax: The most intense moment of the story (mentally or action based). • Falling action: Events that happen after climax that start to bring the story to a close • Denouement: The resolution to the story that brings it to an end. Image from: http: //chrisphillipsclp. blogspot. com/2011/01/music-to-make-write-todenouement. html
• Exposition • Rising action • Climax • Falling Action • Denouement
EXPOSITION – Day is messing around learning his talent. Night is sleeping. CONFLICT – They’re not happy w/ their time of day & are jealous. MOVIE MOMENT: Which part of the plot do these characters’ facial expressions show? ANSWER: The exposition when they learn about each other, and the conflict when their jealousy begins. Climax on Ac tio g in Ri s cti g. A Exposition llin Conflict Fa n MENU RISING ACTION – They beat each other up and show off to prove they are better than the other person. CLIMAX – When they stop to listen to the radio antennae…up until when they’re the same time of day FALLING ACTION – They become the other time of day. Dance w/ each other. Play w/ new powers. Dénouement –They become satisfied & not jealous anymore. Dénouement
• Character vs. Society: The protagonist in the story experiences conflict with society as a whole. http: //4. bp. blogspot. com/_azio. HN-eo. Oo/TN 5 o 7 e. Oaq 3 I/AAAABss/K 4_1 fi. Z 3 Fvc/s 1600/64512_Papel-de-Parede-V-de-Vinganca-V-for. Vendetta_1600 x 1200. jpg http: //conflictwebquest. weebly. com/uploads/4/8/7/5/4875488/3983400. jpg http: //images. static-bluray. com/reviews/2813_1. jpg
https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=Xy. UFKLGu. Rj. U
• A theme can sometimes be found in symbolism: an idea, quality, or concept larger than itself. http: //therockofwaterbury. com/reserved-for-yahweh -the-times-the-seasons/
• protagonist. • • • antagonist.
• First Person Point of View: • Second Person Point of View: • Third Person Omniscient:
• Allusion: a reference to a person, place or literary, historical, artistic, mythological source or event. • Atmosphere: the prevailing emotional and mental climate of a piece of fiction. • Dialogue: the reproduction of a conversation between two of the characters. • Foreshadowing: early clues about what will happen later in a piece of fiction. • Irony: a difference between what is expected and reality. • Style: a writer’s individual and distinct way of writing. The total of the qualities that distinguish one author’s writing from another’s. • Structure: the way time moves through a novel. • Chronological: starts at the beginning and moves through time. • Flashback: starts in the present and then goes back to the past. • Circular or Anticipatory: starts in the present, flashes back to the past, and returns to the present at the conclusion. • Panel: same story told from different viewpoints.
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