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Plot Development How to build a story
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Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Dec 24, 2015

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Robert Gregory
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Page 1: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Plot Development

How to build a story

Page 2: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Differences between “Story” and “Plot”

• Story: a chronological sequence of events– “A” happens; then “B” happens; then “C”

happens, etc. in the exact order in which they occur in time

• Plot: the purposeful organization of events; ordering events to reveal meaningful connections between them in telling a story– author chooses which events to tell and

when to tell them– can be non-linear

• Flashback• en media res

Page 3: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

"I agree that a film [plot] should have a beginning, a middle and an end but not necessarily in that order."

--Jean-Luc Godard (French-Swiss film director, screenwriter, and film critic—most-noted for his work in the 1960’s)

Page 4: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

What You’ve Been Taught Before—

What can you infer about the structure of story from this diagram? Any inaccurate depictions?

Page 5: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

A Better Depiction—

Conflict Introduction

Conflict Development

Conflict Resolution

Page 6: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Exposition: the narrator’s introduction to setting, characters, and opening situation

Gilligan’s Island The Beverly Hillbillies The Nanny Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (just for fun ;0)

Conflict Introduction—

Narrative Hook: the event that introduces the central conflict of the story

(aka—the inciting event)

Page 7: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Rising Action: the events in the story that twist the plot and raise tension, leading to a moment of crisis (climax) that determines the outcomeof the plot

Conflict Development—

(aka) Nouement—(Fr.) literal translation: “knotting up” of the plot

Page 8: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Conflict Resolution—

Climax/Crisis Point the one event that determines

the outcome of the conflict; the final battle in the war that

reveals the winner the moment of crisis—

the final decision with no turning back

a.k.a. epiphany — moment of recognition the “aha!” moment when we recognize the winner of the

conflict/the outcome of the plot perhaps when a protagonist

recognizes the path he must take or his true nature or his family origins (think Oedipus)

perhaps when the protagonist’s true self or role or agenda, etc. is revealed to the other characters.

Page 9: Plot Development How to build a story. Differences between “Story” and “Plot” Story: a chronological sequence of events –“A” happens; then “B” happens;

Conflict Resolution—

Denouement/Resolution

Denouement — (Fr.) literal translation: the “un-knotting” or “untying” of the plot

the fallout or consequences that unravel after the turning point/climax;

what happens after the war is won; brings closure