1- Always a hero, central figures to identify with
2- Taken out of present time into new setting
3- Something happens, a 'call' to lead central figures out of initial state
4- Conflict and uncertainty, including villains
5- Coming to a resolution, ending happily/sadly
Aristotle's poetics
Tragic stories
Fortunes rising
Then disaster
Comedies
1- Things become more and more complicated
2- Complete knot, no escape
3- Perepeteia, knot unravelled
4- Hero liberated
1.2 Structure
Determines the story's
shape and character
Experienced over time
1.3 Beginnings
It's a threshold, separating the real world we inhabit from the world the novelist has imagined
May start with a set-piece description of landscape/townscape
of primary setting
May start in the middle of a conversation
May start with introduction from narrator
May start with a philosophical reflection
Begin with a frame story, explaining how main story was discovered
1.4 Endings
Henry James pioneered the open ending novel- stopping novel in medias res of conversation
Novelist can't conceal
the timing of the end of
the story-pages are
left...
1.5 Time
Epics begin in medias res
Time shift avoids presenting life as one thing after another
Allows us to make connections of causality and irony between widely separated events
Shifts of narrative focus back in time
may change our interpretation of
something which happened much
later in the chronology of the story,
but which we have already
experienced as readers of the text
1.6 Setting
Bakhtin
Cities of classical romance are interchangeable
The Romantic movement opened people's eyes to the
beauty of landscape
Symbolism of cityscapes in industrial age
1.7 Narrators
Unreliable narrators
To reveal the gap between appearance and reality
To show how human beings distort or conceal reality
1.8- Characterisation
Aristotle
"The incidents of the story" took precedence over character
Leslie Stephen
Character > action
Henry James
Action and character inseparable
Characters have agency, they cause things to happen
As people drive the action, they reveal
who they are in terms of motives,
strength...etc, by their actions do we
know them
1.9- Flat and round characters
E.M Forster- Flat=no hidden complexity
Limited to predictable behaviours
We laugh at such characters because they represent the reduction of the human to the mechanical, Henri Bergson philosopher
Round characters have varying degree of depth
Cannot be summed up in a single phrase
Closer to human reality
1.10 Narrative gaps
Use what we know, imagine about the gaps that need to be filled.
Based on our own experiences, getting unique ideas/flavours
Wolfgang Iser "It is only through inevitable omissions that a story gains its dynamism"
Not specifying the size/vastness of something allows to appreciate it more- feel it rather than see it visibly