1 / 12

Characterization

Learn how authors use various methods to create realistic and believable characters, including inner thoughts and feelings, speech, actions, what others say, and appearance.

Download Presentation

Characterization

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Characterization

  2. Date:__________Title: CharacterizationEQ: How do we know the difference between characters in a story?

  3. Characterization • Definition: Several methods used by an author to make a character real and believable.

  4. 1. Inner Thoughts and Feelings The reader gets to see and hear the character’s thoughts and feelings in reaction to different situations. First Person Narrative – Thoughts and feelings are revealed by the main character (I wonder…) Third Person Narrative – The narrator describes the inner thoughts and feelings of the character. (She wondered…) Inner thoughts and feelings are divulged (revealed) about a major character by how he or she tells the story or by how the narrator tells the story. Methods of Characterization

  5. Methods of Characterization 2. Speech The words a character says. • For example, “Whatever…” or “OMG!” may make us think the character is a teenage girl. • Words like “ya’ll” and “ain’t” make us think of someone from the country. • Phrases like “dude,” “surfs up,” or “hang ten” may be phrases we would associate with a surfer. A character’s “speech” may or may not agree with the character’s true inner thoughts and feelings, but the dialogue may reveal more about the character.

  6. Actions – What a character does (verb) walk, run, or stomp Actions reveal the character’s willingness or unwillingness to participate in the events of thestory. Methods of Characterization

  7. Methods of Characterization 4. What others say: • A character’s response or actions may tell the reader something about another character. • For example, how a character talks about another character or the facial expressions one character shows about another character “say” something about a character.

  8. Appearance How a character looks are described by the narrator, by other characters, or in the character’s own words. Physical Traits include: hair color/length, facial description, body type, and clothing etc. Methods ofCharacterization

  9. Review the 5Methods of Characterization I– inner thoughts and feelings S – speech A – actions W – what others say A – appearance …CHARACTER

  10. Antagonist: This character always opposes the protagonist. (an evil adversary) Sometimes the adversary is truly evil or a bully. The “bad guy”. Protagonist: This character is usually the hero of the story. He/She may not be perfect, but the reader or audience “cheers” him/her on. The “good guy”. Type of Characters

  11. Dynamic: A dynamic character changesduring the story. The change is usually a result of solving the conflict. The dynamic character is usually one of the main characters. Static: A static character does not changein a story. Usually the static characters are minor characters. Or possibly the story’s or novel’s antagonist. Type of Characters

  12. Round: A character who we know a lot about. The reader learns many details about this character. They are “well rounded” like a 3-D person. Flat: A character who we don’t know well. The reader learns little about this character. They are “flat” like a paper doll, only 2-D. Types of Characters

More Related