1 / 13

Constructing and editing scenes

Constructing and editing scenes. What is a scene?. A scene is a moment in time in a novel, short story or piece of creative nonfiction. A scene has a clear setting. A scene can be visualised . Usually a scene will also have at least one character who takes action to advance the plot.

jaymeb
Télécharger la présentation

Constructing and editing scenes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Constructing and editing scenes

  2. What is a scene? • A scene is a moment in time in a novel, short story or piece of creative nonfiction. • A scene has a clear setting. • A scene can be visualised. • Usually a scene will also have at least one character who takes action to advance the plot.

  3. When to think about scenes • After an idea has formed. • Some writers will start with scene and then plan later. • Other writers will plan the plot points and then construct the scenes. • At some point, you’ll need to think about the function of the scene.

  4. Building scenes • Try starting with setting. Where is this scene taking place? Write down one location. Consider: • What mood does this particular setting create? • Does this setting symbolise something? • Why is the scene taking place here?

  5. Building scenes • Thinking about your location, write down as many details about that place as possible. • Try to chose details that capture the mood.

  6. Building scenes • Now, consider who will be in this scene. Make a list. • Through whose eyes are we viewing this scene (also known as point of view)? A third person god-like narrator? A third person narrator who is close to a particular character? A particular character?

  7. Building scenes • Return to your description of the place and select the details that the narrator would be able to see. • Change any details to reflect the narrator’s beliefs, attitudes, past experiences, thoughts and emotions.

  8. Building scenes • What will happen in this scene? Choose one or two actions and briefly describe them. • How might the actions that take place in the scene change the mood and feel?

  9. Building scenes • Now put it all together: mix setting, point of view, character and action. Play with what details you reveal when. • Consider the mood you’re trying to create.

  10. Editing the scene • Now you have a rough draft of a scene. • Usually you would first focus on the place of this scene in the narrative and how it connects to the other plot points. • For now, we’ll focus on this one scene.

  11. Building scenes Check for: • Consistent point of view • Visuals: have you given the reader enough detail they can picture the scene at all times? Are the visuals consistent? • Logic: does the scene contain any errors of logic?

  12. Building scenes Check for: • Clarity: do all my sentences make sense? Are there any dangling or misplaced modifiers (e.g. Driving out West, the kangaroos are a real menace)? • Dynamic sentences: are my sentences mostly in active voice (subject appears before the verb)? Do I use strong verbs (runs rather than is running)? • Has repetition been avoided?

  13. Building scenes Check for: • Are my sentences complete unless deliberately not so? A complete sentence contains a subject, a verb and possibly an object. • Have I used commas correctly (in lists, flips, drop-ins and FANBOYS)? • Is the tense consistent?

More Related