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Character revised 9 19_21
1. What happened to you Mr. White?
If the main character and their motives
are believable, we follow the plot.
For Years.
2. This Lecture and the
React & Reflect Essay
As you probably know by now, the first essay is about any
reading/viewing assigned in weeks 1-5, your reactions to
it, and/or one literary element related to those reactions.
Maybe character will be your element.
Which characters seem most real and interesting to you,
likable or not? How did the author bring them to life? This
lecture gives you concepts and terms to think more
deeply about those questions.
Note that character and plot go together, like a gasoline
engine and a drive train. Why not use both and go for the
extended essay option (extra 25)? Learn more, earn
more. We cover plot next week.
2
3. The
Challenge
Writers have a real challenge. With words alone they must
create characters we can tell apart and believe in. But those
characters have to be interesting too, which means they
have to change. And so we need to know their motives and
to see deep enough into their hearts and minds to believe
they can change.
Good writers are psychologists, philosophers, sociologists,
anthropologists and historians all rolled into one. Critics,
readers and movie-goers are still enjoying Jane Austinâs 19th
century characters.
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L
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5. Motive,
Free Will &
Character
Fans of Breaking Bad enjoyed debating Mr.
Whiteâs true motives. He turned to dealing
drugs because he wanted to leave something
for his family. But does he continue in the
criminal life for that reason? Or does he enjoy
the excitement and power? Did the diagnosis
bring out a hidden part of him?
Thatâs part of what makes him interesting. We
wonder who he is at his core â a caring father
and husband or a bold battler who loves living
on the edge? Or somehow both.
What makes a person change, or resist change?
How do different people deal with crisis, threat,
opportunity and gifts? Do we discover ourselves
or make ourselves as we deal with lifeâs hills and
valleys?
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 5
6. Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 6
1. Names &
nicknames
Names suggest character. T'Challa. Darth Vader. Albus Dumbledore. Mary
Poppins. June-May. Lane A Dean Jr. Performers change names to fit their
public persona. John Legend was born John Stephens. Helen Mirrenâs birth
name was Ilyena Vasilievna Mironov.
2. Physical
appearance,
esp. the face
Physical descriptions reveal inner qualities as well as emotional states: a
smile, a laugh, a blush, a nervous tic, posture, body language, even clothes
and accessories.
3. How they act
under pressure
The way a character deals with obstacles & conflicts reveals much, maybe
even to the character themselves, as is true with life. Plots provide those
obstacles and conflicts. If nothing happens, no one changes.
4. Their
Thoughts
In fiction, some types of narration let us hear charactersâ thoughts. In plays,
monologues may do the same. We learn of fears, doubts, hopes, dreams,
biases, delusions, realizations, etc.
5. What others
say about them
The narrator may tell us what to think of a character. (This is more common
in 19th Century Lit, when values were clear and agreed upon.) Other
characters opinions and reactions tell us a lot too.
6. What
Influenced them
In their memories or flashbacks we may find out about people, experiences,
books, music, jobs, places etc. shaped a character.
Some of the Ways Writers Bring Characters to Life
7. Use the
previous
slide to
analyze how
a piece
creates its
characters
The previous slide provides a tool to analyze (take
apart) characterization in anything with characters.
Even a commercial. In your first essay, you could use
each of the 6 criteria as a paragraph/section. See page
95 for more criteria that might apply to your piece.
What if the author doesnât use a criteria at all? Fine,
skip that one, or discuss the absence if you feel itâs a
weakness or it relates in some wat to your reactions.
For example, I myself enjoy descriptions of charactersâ
facial expressions. If a writer leaves that out, I notice. I
canât SEE the person. Or how we donât find out much
about what other people think (#5) of Lane Dean Jr.
because of the type of narration. How did that work
for you?
Main Bonus Points Analysis: 1) Consider a character in the
film/series/book you chose. Using the previous slide, list
the 4 main ways the character is brought to life. Give
examples or quotes.
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 7
8. Anger, happiness, grief, resolve
Descriptions and close-ups of facial expressions reveal so much
about what a character is feeling and how theyâre changing. Here
is Viola Davis showing how itâs done, from the film version of
August Wilsonâs play Fences (which weâll be watching soon.)
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 8
9. Find a Face
Main Bonus Points Analysis: 2) Describe or paste in a picture of a
character in your piece whose face really fits their personality. Here is
Charles Dickensâ (pretty judgmental!) description of the infamous
Ebenezer Scrooge:
Oh! But he was a tight-fisted hand at the grind-stone, Scrooge!
. . . The cold within him froze his old features, nipped his
pointed nose, shriveled his cheek, stiffened his gait; made his
eyes red, his thin lips blue; and spoke out shrewdly in his
grating voice. A frosty rime was on his head, and on his
eyebrows, and his wiry chin. He carried his own low temperature
always about with him; he iced his office in the dogdays; and
didn't thaw it one degree at Christmas.
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 9
10. Types of Characters
Covered in more detail on pp 95-97
Protagonist
(hero)
Leading character. Might be the âgood guy,â larger than life, but in most
modern literature is ordinary. Usually dynamic/round.
Antagonist
(villain)
Opponent of the main character. Blocks them in some way. Could be
dynamic/round but also Static/flat or even a stock character.
Dynamic/
Round
Changes because of the action of the plot. Interesting. Raises questions
we want answered. May surprise us. Most protagonists and many
antagonists are round.
Static/Flat Does not change. Could still be interesting. May have one or two qualities
easily summarized. May change somewhat but no big surprises.
Stock and
Archetypes
Stereotypes, usually in âformulaâ fiction (detective, romance, sci-fi). The
tough newspaper editor, mean boss, goofy grandparent, loyal servant,
sadistic drill sergeant, snarky android. With a good writer / actor stock
characters can come alive.
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 10
Main Bonus Points Analysis: 3) Put the main characters in
the film/series/book youâre analyzing into this chart.
Include at least 2 recurring minor characters.
11. Conflict, problems, obstacles all create plot and keep us wondering what will
happen. And just as in life, they reveal and change people. In âSee You
Yesterdayâ a whiz-kidsâ time travel experiment turns into a high-stakes mission
when a brother is killed. In âRecitatif,â childhood friends wrestle with conflicts
past and present as we wonder who they really are. And in âGood Peopleâ an
unexpected pregnancy sends a young couple on a journey into their hearts,
minds and perhaps even souls.
Conflict, problems and obstacles â where would we be without them?
Main Bonus Points Analysis: 4 & last: Describe one crisis or conflict that really
shows who one of your main characters is. This question can also be done by
itself (5-10 pts depending on level of detail).
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 11
12. Character
Questions
to help start
a React &
Reflect Essay
ï¶ How much did your reaction have to do with the main
character(s)?
ï¶ What 3 words/phrases describe your response? Can you
pinpoint 3 quotes to fit each word? For example, if a
character seemed âconfidentâ find something they say
or think that shows that.
ï¶ What ways from slide 7 does this author used most?
ï¶ Which ways do they use least or not all? Is that a
problem? That is, would you like the story more if there
was more characterization?
ï¶ Did you expect to be interested in the main character or
not? Did you get what you expected?
ï¶ Did a choice a character made surprise you? Looking
back, do we see their motive for that choice?
ï¶ What scene reveals the main characterâs central
conflict?
ï¶ Who changes the most? Why? Who fails to change?
ï¶ What plot events reveal who the main character is,
down deep?
Also see âQuestions about Characterâ on p. 101. And
questions found after the stories. You could structure your
essay on those questions.
Introduction to Character. ENGL 151L 12