PLOT AND STORY
I
taught this class on using fairy-tales to more clearly see how plots work.
Fairy-tales don’t have much character development so it’s easier to see how a
story moves. When I was preparing for the class and as I was teaching it, I
began to think that it was helpful to think of plot and story differently.
Plot
is simple. It’s just what happens
in the story. You need to have it
to keep things moving along. This happens. That happens. Looking at fairy-tales is very helpful
for this.
Story
is the complications, complexity, contradictions, desires, obstacles that make
a novel the messy thing we all love. These developments give depth to the plot.
There’s external character motivation and internal motivation. Often times
these drive the story. There’s the subtext that gives greater meaning to the
story. There’s what the characters want and what gets in the way of that and
the result. There’s the theme: what’s it all about? And more. It’s easy to get lost in all this.
So once you have a draft and you’re
trying to see what you have might consider the differences between plot and
story; it might help to summarize what happens in a chapter by chapter kind of
way and analyze plot and then look at what else is going on. It’s one way to
see your draft from another perspective.
For
another way of looking at this see these plot questions from the editor Cheryl Klein
3 comments:
This is great, Brian! Thank you!
This is great, Brian! Thank you!
Thanks, Demetra.
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