H3 - Setting, Conflict, Plot Structure

Literary devices
Setting - plot - character - conflict
 

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Slide 1: Slide
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This lesson contains 28 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.

Items in this lesson

Literary devices
Setting - plot - character - conflict
 

Slide 1 - Slide

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Match
Match the elements with the examples

1 Setting
2 Plot
3 Characters

Slide 2 - Slide

King's Cross station
Conchie Joe Patience
Georgie enlists in the army
Alfie takes the train
Alfie's birthday
Kalena Janácek

Elements of Fiction

  • Setting
  • Plot structure
  • Characters
  • Types of Conflict

Slide 3 - Slide

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4

Slide 4 - Video

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Interest and suspense are built during which part of the story?
A
Exposition
B
Inciting Incident
C
Climax
D
Rising action

Slide 5 - Quiz

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Conflict starts in which part of the story?
A
Exposition
B
Inciting Incident
C
Climax
D
Rising action

Slide 6 - Quiz

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01:40
What is plot?
A
All events in a story
B
The most important event in the story
C
A series of events with conflict
D
Where the story takes place

Slide 7 - Quiz

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03:13
So, what does the exposition do?
A
It sets the scene and story
B
It introduces the conflict

Slide 8 - Quiz

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03:14
Why is the line in Freytag's pyramid flat in the exposition?

Slide 9 - Open question

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05:28
What is the definition of climax?
A
The turning point of a story
B
The beginning of the story
C
The most exciting part of the story
D
The point when the conflict is resolved

Slide 10 - Quiz

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Setting
Setting = Time and place

Examples?


The setting affects the mood/atmosphere in a story.

Slide 11 - Slide

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Why is the plot structure important?
Plot structure is not just used in literature, but also in storytelling, television and film.

Once you know plot structure, you can automatically organise something abstract into something that is concrete and makes sense. 


Slide 12 - Slide

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Take a look at these words
Love          Friendship              Revenge

Greed               Death                Equality                       Hope

Guilt                     Responsibility                      Justice

Slide 13 - Slide

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Topic

... is generally 1 word that outlines the main idea being explored in a text 

Examples: love, revenge, family, nature, war
Theme

... is the moral lesson that the author wants the reader to learn. Usually 1 sentence.

Slide 14 - Slide

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Topic

Fear of death

Love


Friendship
Theme

the fear of death can be a catalyst of change

People will often sacrifice anything for those they love

Friendship can often get people through even the hardest of times

Slide 15 - Slide

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Slide 16 - Slide

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Plot Structure
= all the events that make up (the main part of) a story.

All events relate to each other in a sort of pattern and this organisation has an effect on how the reader feels about the story or its characters. 

Before we continue, we need to revise "setting"...

Slide 17 - Slide

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What is the setting in a story?
A
A lesson being taught
B
When and where the story occurs
C
The events happening in the story
D
How the characters are described

Slide 18 - Quiz

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Which of the following is an example of setting? (more than 1 answer possible)
A
A fight
B
A high school in 1987
C
Blue jacket
D
March

Slide 19 - Quiz

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True or false: the setting can affect the character's mood in a story.
A
True
B
False

Slide 20 - Quiz

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Types of Conflict
External Conflict



Internal Conflict

Slide 21 - Slide

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Slide 22 - Video

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Types of Conflict
External Conflict
  • Person against Nature
  • Person against Society
  • Person against Person

Internal Conflict
  • Person against Self

Slide 23 - Slide

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What is an example of a Person against Nature Conflict?
A
Surviving a hurricane
B
Getting abducted by aliens
C
Having a fight with a friend
D
Getting stuck on a hill after a tsunami

Slide 24 - Quiz

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Slide 25 - Slide

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Check your text
  • Using different tenses for the same time
  • Missing capital letters
  • Dont instead of don’t, cant instead of can’t
  • Missing full stops, commas, question marks (especially in dialogue)
  • Missing apostrophes (Alfie's birthday)
  • No scene setting or No dialogue
  • Too short / Too long
  • Word order (specifically time and place -> should be at beginning or end of sentence)

Slide 26 - Slide

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Types of Conflict
External Conflict
  • Person against Nature
  • Person against Supernatural
  • Person against Society
  • Person against Person
  • Person against Technology

Internal Conflict
  • Person against Self

Slide 27 - Slide

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Back to plot structure
The plot structure consists of 6 smaller parts: 

1. exposition
2. inciting incident
3. rising action
4. climax
5. falling action
6. resolution.

Slide 28 - Slide

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