Setting Time Mood Place Examples Social Setting Understanding
- Slides: 12
Setting Time Mood Place Examples Social Setting Understanding Literary Terms © Presto Plans
What Is Setting? To put it simply, the setting is the time and place of the action in a fictional story. © Presto Plans
Setting The setting of any story includes three closely related aspects: 1. The physical world of the work. 2. The time in which the action takes place. 3. The social environment of the characters © Presto Plans
Physical World The physical setting includes the author’s description of the place, scenery, weather, location, season etc. A good author sets the scene of the physical world, so the reader is able to transport themselves into the world of the characters. Some words you might use for the physical world include city, state, country, castle, cottage, snowy, sunny, summer, park etc. © Presto Plans
Time The time in which the action takes place could include information on the time of day, time of year, or even a particular time in history! Some words you might use for the time period could include afternoon, evening, the future, colonial times, etc © Presto Plans
Social Environment The social environment of the setting includes the manners, customs, and moral values of the characters’ society. This could include local customs or societal norms that differ from the modern day world of the reader, or from a country that is foreign to the reader. Some words you might use for the social environment might be traditions, customs, norms, values, manners etc. © Presto Plans
Setting Checklist To recap, the setting details could describe: üTime of day üTime of year Itü may include Time in geographical History location, historical period, season, weather time of day, and even local customs and manners. Setting helps build background for a üScenery story and can affect the tone and mood. üWeather üLocation üSeason üLocal customs üSocietal norms © Presto Plans
Setting Description A good setting allows the reader to easily visualize the places in the story. A good author will include detailed descriptions of the setting which use imagery (5 senses) © Presto Plans
Hear The Difference! Listen to the difference between a basic setting description and a more detailed one which uses imagery: “It was foggy beside the water” OR “The waves crashed loudly against the shoreline. The fog lifted lightly and the medieval castle came into view. It was a beautiful site! The fog brushed my face and I could smell the smoke from the fire in the distance and taste the sea salt on my lips. ” © Presto Plans
Setting - Mood The setting can also create a particular mood. This means it can affect the way we, the reader, feel. Consider the following settings. What mood do they evoke? nquil a r T & ul f Peace © Presto Plans Mysterious & Frighten ing
Examples! Click the images below (in full screen mode) to see video clip examples of movies where the setting plays a crucial role in driving the plot. In fact, some may argue that the setting itself becomes a character! Charlie And The Chocolate Factory © Presto Plans Alice In Wonderland
Examples! Can you think of any other movies or novels that have a crucial setting? Here a few more to consider: Lord Of The Rings The Hunger Games Harry Potter The Diary Of Anne Frank © Presto Plans
- Understanding jim crow (setting the setting)
- The necklace settings
- Boy in the striped pyjamas setting
- Setting time place and atmosphere
- Mood passages
- Frankenstein setting time and place
- Frankenstein setting time and place
- Analyzing setting in literature
- The gift of the magi setting time and place
- Setting includes the time period, place, and of a story.
- Subject verb object adverbial examples
- Place place value and period
- Disturbance that transfers energy