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Character Types & Development
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Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Jun 06, 2020

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Page 1: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

CharacterTypes & Development

Page 2: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Types of CharactersProtagonist ● The main character in a

story

Antagonist● The person the main

character comes into conflict with

Page 3: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Types of Characters Continued...

Flat● Only one clearly

shown trait● Usually distinctly

good or evil, and rely on stereotypes

Round● A variety of

character traits● They are three

dimensional and have depth

Page 4: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Continued...Static● These characters do

not change or develop

● They stay the same throughout the text

Dynamic● These characters

experience significant change in terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc.

Page 5: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Character DevelopmentIn order for a story to seem real, the characters must seem real to readers.

Characters are developed in the story through characterization, which is the information the author gives the reader about the characters.

Page 6: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Methods of CharacterizationThoughts & Feelings● A character’s

thoughts, memories and reactions reveal what motivates the character

Actions● How a character

behaves reveals his or her values

Page 7: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Methods continued...Dialogue● What a character

says and how he/she says it reveals his/her personality and relationships

Other characters’ comments● What other

characters say about another reveals a lot about him/her

Page 8: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Methods continued (again!)Setting● Imagining the

character in a particular setting immediately shapes a reader’s impression

Physical Appearance● Physical appearance

or the clothes a character chooses to wear can create an immediate impression

Page 9: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Point of View● Refers to the perspective from which the

story is told

There are three main types that you will find in literature:

Page 10: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

First Person Narrative● The narrator is a character in the story and

will use the word “I” in telling the story

Page 11: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Third Person Omniscient● The narrator is someone outside the story● Uses “he”, “she”, “they” to talk about the

characters● Omniscient means the narrator knows and

sees all

Page 12: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Third Person Limited● The narrator is someone outside the story● Uses “he”, “she”, “they” to refer to the

characters● The narrator tells the story from one

character’s eyes only● They do not know the thoughts of everyone

Page 13: Character - Ms. Searle's Classnot change or develop They stay the same ... terms of personality, attitude, mannerisms, etc. Character Development In order for a story to seem real,

Second Person ● Less commonly used in literature● This is where the narrator directly refers to

readers by using words like “you” or “your”