Muwa
Muwa
Muwa
CHARACTER
- A real or imaginary person who inhabits and gives meaning to the story.
CHARACTER ROLES
TYPES OF CHARACTER
1. FLAT / STATIC - Someone whose personality does not change throughout the events in
the story’s plot.
2. ROUND / DYNAMIC - Who changes his or her personality or worldview as the story
goes.
SETTING
- The place and time where and when an event happens.
- Where a story takes place is also called its locale.
DIMENSIONS OF SETTING
Ex. Everywhere was green. It was summer, the sun is shining all over the place. Swings,
slides, play horses was there. The grass is cut and layout stunningly amazing. You can find
different kinds of colorful birds such as: green parrots, white doves, etc.
2. TIME - This refers to a specific point in a day, week, month or year, and the amount of
time elapsed from the start of an event until the end.
3. SOCIOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT - Places can be characterized by how their people
collectively decide on the ideas that govern their behavior.
4. PSYCHOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT - Refers to the “personality” of a place used as
the setting. For example, the old mansion is dreary; the neighborhood is cheerful; the one
across town is sleepy. (adjective)
POINT OF VIEW - refers to the source and scope of the narrative voice.
- The position, standpoint or perspective from which the events of the story are seen
or observed.
VARIOUS POINT OF VIEW
1. FIRST PERSON POINT OF VIEW - Identifiable by the use of the pronoun “I, me, my,
we, our” A character in the story does the narration.
EXAMPLE. “Call me Ishmael. Some years ago – never mind how long precisely –
having little or no money in my purse, and nothing particular to interest me on shore, I
thought I would sail about a little and see the watery part of the world.” - Moby Dick by
Herman Melville
2. SECOND PERSON POINT OF VIEW - The narrator refers to the reader as “you, your,
yours.” Making the audience member feel as if he or she is a character within the story.
EXAMPLE. “You have friends who actually care about you and speak the language of
the inner self. You have avoided them of late. Your soul is as dishevelled as your
apartment, and until you can clean it up a little you don’t want to invite anyone inside.” -
Bright Lights, Big City by Jay
3. THIRD PERSON POINT OF VIEW - “She, he, they, them, names of people.” The
narrator is outside the story and relating the experiences of a character.
EXAMPLE. “Do you want to eat? If you do, then you need to get cilantro instead of
acting like a lazy pig,” Tin said, thinking, I can’t believe I married this jerk. At least back
then he had a six pack, not his hairy potbelly. “Figure it out, Tina. I’m sick of rushing to
the store every time you forget something.” said Fred. He felt the anger pulsing through
his large belly.
PLOT - the sequence of events that make up a story, how the story develops, unfolds, and moves in
time.
KINDS OF PLOT
ELEMENTS OF PLOT
TYPES OF PLOT
1. LINEAR PLOT - consist of events that have a clear beginning, middle and end. The story
unfolds in a chronological order.
2. EPISODIC PLOT - short events are linked to one another by common characters, places,
or a unified theme but are held apart by individual plot, purpose, and subtext.
4. CUMULATIVE PLOT - events are repeated with one new aspect added with each
repetition.
5. CIRCULAR PLOT - characters in the story end up in the same place that they were at the
beginning of the story.
6. in medias res - The plot starts at the middle of the story. It provides flashbacks for the
readers to determine what happened before a plot’s initial action.
7. in extrema res - The plot starts at the end of the story. Like in medias res, it contains a lot
of flashbacks.
TYPES OF CONFLICT
1. MAN VS. SELF TYPES OF CONFLICT - The struggle between the protagonist and his
or herself.
2. MAN VS. MAN - The struggle between the protagonist and another person.
3. MAN VS. NATURE - The struggle between the protagonist and natural forces (e.g., water,
earth, wind, fire, diseases, etc.)
5. MAN VS. SOCIETY - The struggle between the protagonist and a group of people who
belongs to a social institution (e.g., government, religion, etc.)