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Creative Writing

Creative Writing. Write about an idea for a story that you might want to tell. Minimum 5 sentences. Objective. By the end of this lesson you should be able to identify the following ideas about fiction: Protagonist Antagonist Conflict Complications Shifts of power Crisis Falling action

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Creative Writing

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  1. Creative Writing Write about an idea for a story that you might want to tell. Minimum 5 sentences

  2. Objective • By the end of this lesson you should be able to identify the following ideas about fiction: • Protagonist • Antagonist • Conflict • Complications • Shifts of power • Crisis • Falling action • Resolution

  3. Draw a face that is missing a vital feature.

  4. Form • A “story” is a “form” of literature. • Like a face, it has necessary features in a necessary harmony.

  5. What a story must include: • Conflict • Crisis • Resolution

  6. Conflict • Only trouble is interesting • Example: the picnic

  7. Conflict: discuss • 3-D: Drama = desire + danger • Desire = want • Want leads to danger

  8. Desire • Think about three possible desires that could drive a story.

  9. Danger • Great dangers are not always the most spectacular • Therefore, the greatest wants don’t have to be spectacular, they just need to spectacularly felt. • Not shock dangers

  10. Write • Write about the possible dangers, no matter how unspectacular, eachdesire could produce.

  11. What is the conflict of eachstory? • Now that you’ve got the desire, describe the conflict of that this story could have. • What is the want?

  12. Conflict Categories • Wo/man against wo/man • Wo/man against nature • Wo/man against society • Wo/man against machine • Wo/man against God • Wo/man against her/himself

  13. Where does your story fit? • Into which category does your desire fit? • Why?

  14. Crisis and Resolution • Once conflict is established and developed in a story, the conflict must come to a crisis—the final turning point—and a resolution • Why does a story need order?

  15. Order • Order implies that the subject has been brought to closure • Reader leaves with a sense of completion

  16. The Arc of the Story • The decision points that lead to a final choice • Change, change, change!

  17. Story as a War • 1. Get your fighters fighting • Start the conflict right awayin order to get your reader’s attention.

  18. Story as a War • 2. Have something—the stake—worth fighting over • The stake over which wars are fought is usually a territory. It is vital to your story that the territory around which the conflict is centered is as important as your own home.

  19. Story as a War • 3. Have the fight drive into a series of battles with the last battle in the series being the biggest and most dangerous of all. • Each battle in the story is a complication that adds to the tension of the conflict • Each battle should have more at stake and should be bigger than the last • Each complication is a change in the story

  20. Story as a War • 4. Have a walking away from the fight • Permanent change • Resolution

  21. Apply • Look at the outline and the desire/want surrounding it. • Describe how one of your potential stories fits into each of the four points of “The Story as a War” example.

  22. PART II: POWER

  23. Patterns of Power • Protagonist: central character • Antagonist: opponent • Give me three example of each from the last three movies you have seen

  24. Power • Each antagonist is given equal power so the reader is left in doubt about the outcome • The antagonist must represent a real and potent danger • The pattern of the story’s complications will be achieved by shifting the power back and forth from protagonist to antagonist, until the power shift irretrievably in one direction

  25. How to think about power • Identify a source of power for each antagonist surrounding the character’s conflict • If power is one sided, suspense will be lost • Power is anything that prevents the protagonist from reaching what he/she desires

  26. Freitag’s pyramid of five actions

  27. Check Mark • In a compact story form, the falling action and the expository are going to be almost nonexistent, so we need another form… • Think of the story form not as a pyramid with sides of equal length but as an inverted check mark.

  28. Cinderella

  29. Conflict in Cinderella • Cinderella’s mother dies and her father marries a brutal woman with two horrific daughters. • Cinderella must do all the dirty jobs.

  30. Power Pattern • Stepmother (starts out with more power) • Ugliness • Evil • Numbers (daughters) • Parental Authority • Cinderella • Beauty • Goodness

  31. First Complication/Event • The first event/battle of the story is that an invitation arrives from the Prince, which explicitly states that all ladies of the land are invited to the ball. • Where does the power shift because of this event?

  32. Second Complication • Stepmother takes back power by blunt force • “YOU CAN’T GO!”

  33. Third Complication • The Fairy Godmother appears. • Very powerful to have magic on your side!

  34. Fourth Complication • Magic only last until Midnight. • Be home by twelve or risk exposure and defeat.

  35. Fifth Complication • Prince falls in love with Cinderella. • Love is even more powerful in Literature than magic

  36. Sixth Complication • Clock strikes 12 • Loses her slipper

  37. Seventh Complication • Prince sends out a royal decree that everyone must try on the slipper. • A dramatic repetition of the original invitation • Cinderella given her rights again

  38. Eight Complication • “YOU MAY NOT!” • The stepmother also repeats her assumption of brute authority by hiding Cinderella away • Delay by grotesque comedy: one sister cuts off her toe, the other cuts off a heel

  39. Crisis • The slipper fits! • Magic, love, and royalty join to recognize the heroine’s true self; evil, numbers, and authority are powerless against them. • The power struggle has been decided. • When the slipper fits, no further action can occur that will deprive Cinderella of her desire. • The change that occurs is significant and permanent.

  40. Brief Falling Action • Wedding • Walking away from the fight

  41. Resolution • And they live happily ever after.

  42. Read: “The Use of Force” • By William Carlos Williams

  43. Answer • Answer questions 1-3 at the end of your reading. • Write your answers on the back of your starter.

  44. Question 2 • Using question 2 as your guide, plot the story by points with an upside-down-checkmark story-form chart. • Be sure you highlight: • Protagonist • Antagonist • Conflict • Complications • Shifts of power and points • Crisis • Falling action • Resolution

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