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Published byHorace Clarke Modified over 8 years ago
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“If Albert Einstein was such a genius, how come every time we call someone “Einstein”, it’s an insult? I don’t think we are honoring that man properly” -Brian Regan Warm up Riddle: What common trait do salad, peanut butter, and works of fiction share? Bonus question: What is that called?
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A work of fiction, like any other type of art, is comprised of certain components, or ingredients, that all work to create a story that is worth reading What are the ingredients that work together to make a work of fiction? What is character? What are the different types of character? What is plot? What are the ingredients of a plot?
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Discuss what you did yesterday Identify and define different elements of fiction -Character -Conflict -Plot …and more! Recall what you learn and apply it to your own experiences with literature
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a set of qualities that make a person, place, or thing different from other persons, places, or thing
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a person, animal or imaginary creature that takes part in the action of a story
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the focus character in a story
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the less important character in a story
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a character that changes little or not at all
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a character that changes significantly
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the main character in the story who is involved in the conflict
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the force working against the main character
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the ways a writer creates and develops a character
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Looks Thoughts/feelings Actions Viewed by others Talk the talk vs walk the walk
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a struggle between two opposing forces
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when a character struggles against some outside person or force character v. man character v. society character v. nature character v. fate
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a struggle within a character character v. self
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the sequence of events that make up a story
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introduces the setting, characters and conflict in the story
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the plot gets more complicated; leads up to the climax
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the point of highest interest or suspense in a story; the turning point
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the loose ends are tied up and the story comes to a close
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What ingredients did we learn about today?
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the perspective from which a story is told
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when the narrator is a character in a story (I, me, we)
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when the narrator is not a character in the story (he, she, it, they)
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the time and place of the action in a story
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the moral, message, or lesson about life that the writer wants the reader to learn
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humorous or scornful use of words to express the opposite of what one really means; what is said or written is not what is meant
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Contrast between what is said and what is meant Nice weather we are having!
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Contrast between what the character thinks to be true and what the reader knows to be true. When the reader is “in on a secret.”
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contrast between what happens and what is expected. someone playing a prank on someone else, it backfires, and the prankster gets a pie in the face.
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