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Published byElfreda Hall Modified over 9 years ago
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Conflict in Literature
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Conflict: The struggle that the main character, or protagonist, goes through in fiction or a drama. Each plot event is usually related to the conflict which is resolved in some way by the end of the work.
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Two types of Conflict: External – the main character’s struggle with an outside force or antagonist such as nature, society, fate or another character. Internal – a struggle that takes place in the protagonist’s mind.
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Protagonist: The main or central character (the good guy)
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Antagonist: The force that acts against the protagonist (the bad guy)
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The two types of conflict can be shown in the following ways: Protagonist v/s nature: the central character battles the forces of nature (ex.: caught in a rain storm w/ no umbrella, stalked by a wild animal)
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Protagonist v/s Society The central character battles societal norms (ex.: a new student dressing differently than the other students, a person who won’t drink even though his friends are)
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Protagonist v/s Fate: The central character battles situations beyond his/her control (ex.: a 5’2” male who weighs 105 pounds wants to be a pro football player, young person who has cancer)
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Protagonist v/s Another Character: The central character battles another character in the story (ex.: Luke Skywalker vs. Darth Vadar, Tweety vs. Sylvester)
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Protagonist v/s Himself/Herself: The central character has to make personal decisions about what is the right thing to do (ex.: a young person must decide whether or not to tell his parents he stole some money, a person sees a twenty dollar bill fall out of someone’s pocket and must decide whether to return it or not.)
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