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Fiction
Prepared by: Alexandria Rabo
What is Fiction?
•A form of writing that is made up.
•Refers to short story and novels.
•Normally contains lessons, themes and
messages about life.
FORMS OF
FICTION
MYTHS
•involves gods and
goddess, heroes and
superbeings.
ADVENTURE
•Stories that contains
plot with an exciting
involving risks and
danger as its main
theme.
LEGENDS
•Stories that have
historical basis that has
been down from one
generation to the next.
MYSTERY
•Usually realistic about a
mysterious events which is
not explained a crime that
is not solved until the end.
FANTASY
•A fiction that contains
elements that are not
real.
SCIENCE
FICTION
•Stories which
includes future
technology or
innovations.
REALISTIC FICTION
•Stories that tell about a situation
occurring in the real world.
•Is often exaggerated situations,
characaters.
•Did not truly happen in reality but is
possible.
HISTORICAL FICTION
•Stories which took place in a
particular time period in the
past that includes facts
about the time period.
•Basic setting is real, but
fictional characters.
FOLKTALES
•Has simple characters who
may be people of made up
characters.
•Passed down from
generation to generation.
PLAY/DRAMA
•Stories that were written
for a performance in front
of an audience.
FAIRYTALES
•Has difficult problems to
solve.
•Involves entities such as
dwarfs, fairies, giants,
mermaids, witches.
•Usually contains magic or
enchantments.
FABLES
Story where the
animals are able
to act like
humans.
SHORT STORIES
•Limits characterizations
•Usually 2,000 to 6,000
words
•Has 8-24 pages
NOVELLA
•Halfway of a story and a novel
that has at least 50 to 150
pages.
NOVEL
•A long narrative work of
fiction
•Contains 250 pages and
above
Varieties of
Plot Pattern
OVERCOMINGTHE
MONSTER
•The protagonist sets out to
defeat an antagonistic force
which threatens the protagonist
and their homeland.
RAGSTO RICHES
•The poor protagonist acquires
things such as power, wealth,
and a mate, before losing it all
and gaining it back upon
growing as a person.
THE QUEST
•The protagonist and some
companions set out to acquire
an important object or to get
to a location, facing many
obstacles and temptations
along the way.
VOYAGE AND RETURN
•The protagonist goes to a
strange land and, after
overcoming the threats it
poses to him or her, returns
with experience.
COMEDY
•Light and humorous character
with a happy or cheerful ending.
•a dramatic work in which the
central motif is the triumph over
adverse circumstance, resulting
in a successful or happy
conclusion
COMEDY
•It refers to a pattern where the
conflict becomes more and more
confusing, but is at last made
plain in a single clarifying event.
Most romances fall into this
category.
TRAGEDY
•The protagonist is a hero with one
major character flaw or great
mistake which is ultimately their
undoing.
• Their unfortunate end evokes pity at
their folly and the fall of a
fundamentally 'good' character.
REBIRTH
•During the course of the story, an
important event forces the main
character to change their ways,
often making them a better
person.
Literary
Techniques
• FORESHADOWING
• Early clues on what might happen in the future
• THEME
• Central topic
• SYMBOLISM
• Represents idea, quality concepts
• DIALOGUE
• Conversation between two or more characters.
•ATMOSPHERE
• Prevailing emotional and mental climate of a
fiction.
•STRUCTURE
• The way time moves in a novel
•PANEL
• Same story told from different point of views
•POINT OFVIEW
•The perspective of the narrator
who will present the action to the
reader.
1.First Person- the narrator is a
character in the story and tells
the story from his or her
perspective.
2. Second Person - told from the
perspective of “you”.
3.Third Person - narrator is not a
character in the story.
- uses “he/she/it”
3.Third Person
•Third Person Limited:
•Limited means that the POV is limited
to only one character
•Which means that the narrator only
knows what that character knows.
•Third Person Multiple:
•This type is still in the "he/she/it"
category, but now the narrator
can follow multiple characters in
the story.
•The challenge is making sure that
the reader knows when you are
switching from one character to
another.
•Third Person Omniscient:
•This point of view still uses the
"he/she/it" narration but now the
narrator knows EVERYTHING.
•The narrator can know things that
others don't, can make comments
about what's happening, and can
see inside the minds of other
characters.
•FIGURE EIGHT
•Looks time around a central moment.
•FLASHBACKS
•Simple method of inserting an episode
that occurred previously on the plot.
•FRAME STORY
•Tales told by a character appearing in
a larger work such as a separate
narrative.
•OUT OF SEQUENCE
• The information is scrambled throughout
the story.
•CIRCULAR/ANTICIPATORY
• it starts in the present, has flashbacks in
the past, and returns to present for
conclusion.
•CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
• the character cannot see their future.
•MULTIPLE FLASHBACKS
• Flashbacks of the story that has complicated
set of clues that leads to solution of the
problem.
•FLASH FORWARD (PROLEPSIS)
• Gives the character a sudden, clear-eyed
glimpse into the future.
•REVERSE ORDER
• it marches the character into the past;
changes will affect the present.
•TONE coloring of the
emotion
•STYLE diction, balance
of modes
•SYMBOL meaning beyong
•TENSION makes story
more interesting
TECHNIQUES OFTENSION
• Irony and Satire
• Verbal Irony
• Dramatic Irony
• Arousing Curiosity
• Dramatic Questions
• Suspense
• Dramatic Conflict
• Mainspring of fiction and drama
SOURCES OF BAD
FICTION
SOURCES OF BAD FICTION
• DRAMA
• HIGHTECH MELODRAMA
• Overloaded dramatic suspense
• Over-rated
• ADOLESCENTTRAGEDY
• Sophisticated fiction as long as you keep you
material genuine and fresh in detail.
• POE GIMMICK
• Edgar Allan Poe is the master of strange, bizzare
and surprise ending.
SOURCES OF BAD FICTION
•MOCK FAULKNER
• Imitation deprives writers in their own voice
at best and sometimes result in unintended
satire.
•THE TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS OF
AN INCORRUPTIBLEWRITER
• Protagonist walks up and down a beach,
planning a great model.
SOURCES OF BAD FICTION
•THE FREE-FLYING FANTASY
• Not to be confused with “stream of
conscious writing”
•YUPPIE GONEWRONG (CLICHÉ)
• Protagonist puts career and love ahead of
love.
-END-

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Introduction to Fiction

  • 2. What is Fiction? •A form of writing that is made up. •Refers to short story and novels. •Normally contains lessons, themes and messages about life.
  • 4. MYTHS •involves gods and goddess, heroes and superbeings.
  • 5. ADVENTURE •Stories that contains plot with an exciting involving risks and danger as its main theme.
  • 6. LEGENDS •Stories that have historical basis that has been down from one generation to the next.
  • 7. MYSTERY •Usually realistic about a mysterious events which is not explained a crime that is not solved until the end.
  • 8. FANTASY •A fiction that contains elements that are not real.
  • 10. REALISTIC FICTION •Stories that tell about a situation occurring in the real world. •Is often exaggerated situations, characaters. •Did not truly happen in reality but is possible.
  • 11. HISTORICAL FICTION •Stories which took place in a particular time period in the past that includes facts about the time period. •Basic setting is real, but fictional characters.
  • 12. FOLKTALES •Has simple characters who may be people of made up characters. •Passed down from generation to generation.
  • 13. PLAY/DRAMA •Stories that were written for a performance in front of an audience.
  • 14. FAIRYTALES •Has difficult problems to solve. •Involves entities such as dwarfs, fairies, giants, mermaids, witches. •Usually contains magic or enchantments.
  • 15. FABLES Story where the animals are able to act like humans.
  • 16. SHORT STORIES •Limits characterizations •Usually 2,000 to 6,000 words •Has 8-24 pages
  • 17. NOVELLA •Halfway of a story and a novel that has at least 50 to 150 pages.
  • 18. NOVEL •A long narrative work of fiction •Contains 250 pages and above
  • 20. OVERCOMINGTHE MONSTER •The protagonist sets out to defeat an antagonistic force which threatens the protagonist and their homeland.
  • 21. RAGSTO RICHES •The poor protagonist acquires things such as power, wealth, and a mate, before losing it all and gaining it back upon growing as a person.
  • 22. THE QUEST •The protagonist and some companions set out to acquire an important object or to get to a location, facing many obstacles and temptations along the way.
  • 23. VOYAGE AND RETURN •The protagonist goes to a strange land and, after overcoming the threats it poses to him or her, returns with experience.
  • 24. COMEDY •Light and humorous character with a happy or cheerful ending. •a dramatic work in which the central motif is the triumph over adverse circumstance, resulting in a successful or happy conclusion
  • 25. COMEDY •It refers to a pattern where the conflict becomes more and more confusing, but is at last made plain in a single clarifying event. Most romances fall into this category.
  • 26. TRAGEDY •The protagonist is a hero with one major character flaw or great mistake which is ultimately their undoing. • Their unfortunate end evokes pity at their folly and the fall of a fundamentally 'good' character.
  • 27. REBIRTH •During the course of the story, an important event forces the main character to change their ways, often making them a better person.
  • 29. • FORESHADOWING • Early clues on what might happen in the future • THEME • Central topic • SYMBOLISM • Represents idea, quality concepts • DIALOGUE • Conversation between two or more characters.
  • 30. •ATMOSPHERE • Prevailing emotional and mental climate of a fiction. •STRUCTURE • The way time moves in a novel •PANEL • Same story told from different point of views
  • 31. •POINT OFVIEW •The perspective of the narrator who will present the action to the reader. 1.First Person- the narrator is a character in the story and tells the story from his or her perspective.
  • 32. 2. Second Person - told from the perspective of “you”. 3.Third Person - narrator is not a character in the story. - uses “he/she/it”
  • 33. 3.Third Person •Third Person Limited: •Limited means that the POV is limited to only one character •Which means that the narrator only knows what that character knows.
  • 34. •Third Person Multiple: •This type is still in the "he/she/it" category, but now the narrator can follow multiple characters in the story. •The challenge is making sure that the reader knows when you are switching from one character to another.
  • 35. •Third Person Omniscient: •This point of view still uses the "he/she/it" narration but now the narrator knows EVERYTHING. •The narrator can know things that others don't, can make comments about what's happening, and can see inside the minds of other characters.
  • 36. •FIGURE EIGHT •Looks time around a central moment. •FLASHBACKS •Simple method of inserting an episode that occurred previously on the plot. •FRAME STORY •Tales told by a character appearing in a larger work such as a separate narrative.
  • 37. •OUT OF SEQUENCE • The information is scrambled throughout the story. •CIRCULAR/ANTICIPATORY • it starts in the present, has flashbacks in the past, and returns to present for conclusion. •CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER • the character cannot see their future.
  • 38. •MULTIPLE FLASHBACKS • Flashbacks of the story that has complicated set of clues that leads to solution of the problem. •FLASH FORWARD (PROLEPSIS) • Gives the character a sudden, clear-eyed glimpse into the future. •REVERSE ORDER • it marches the character into the past; changes will affect the present.
  • 39. •TONE coloring of the emotion •STYLE diction, balance of modes •SYMBOL meaning beyong •TENSION makes story more interesting
  • 40. TECHNIQUES OFTENSION • Irony and Satire • Verbal Irony • Dramatic Irony • Arousing Curiosity • Dramatic Questions • Suspense • Dramatic Conflict • Mainspring of fiction and drama
  • 42. SOURCES OF BAD FICTION • DRAMA • HIGHTECH MELODRAMA • Overloaded dramatic suspense • Over-rated • ADOLESCENTTRAGEDY • Sophisticated fiction as long as you keep you material genuine and fresh in detail. • POE GIMMICK • Edgar Allan Poe is the master of strange, bizzare and surprise ending.
  • 43. SOURCES OF BAD FICTION •MOCK FAULKNER • Imitation deprives writers in their own voice at best and sometimes result in unintended satire. •THE TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS OF AN INCORRUPTIBLEWRITER • Protagonist walks up and down a beach, planning a great model.
  • 44. SOURCES OF BAD FICTION •THE FREE-FLYING FANTASY • Not to be confused with “stream of conscious writing” •YUPPIE GONEWRONG (CLICHÉ) • Protagonist puts career and love ahead of love.
  • 45. -END-