I. Fable:
A. Fable: A short story with a message, usually one involving a moral.
More often than not characters are talking animals.
II. Plot: How the story unfolds
A. Dramatic situation: a person is involved in some conflict, character vs self, character vs character, character vs society, character vs nature, or character vs god.
B. Beginning, middle, and end.
1. Exposition: “The opening portion that sets the theme.”
a) Complication: conflict
b) Protagonist: “good guy”
c) Antagonist: “bad guy”
2. Rising Action: events leading up to the climax
a) Suspense: pleasurably anxiety
b) Foreshadowing: indication of events to come
c) Crisis: a moment of high tension
3. Climax: Moment of greatest tension at which the outcome is decided
4. Conclusion/Resolution/Denouement: Outcome
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In medias res: “In the midst of things” A. First presenting some exciting or significant moment, then filling in what happened later. 1. Flashback/retrospect: device used to fill what happened earlier
A & P
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Updike’s attention to each characters most minor individual details is befuddling in all honesty. To the extent that you would find his 19 year old narrator to either be super human or extremely attentive to the most unimportant of things. The description of details serves to help the reader form a deeper connection with the 19 year old through imagery, placing themselves in their shoes, making the end result all the more dramatic and impactful. As he studies the girls you begin to visualize yourself there, in the grocery store, one similar to one that you frequent often, seeing the people of your neighborhood and the workers you greet each