Difference between revisions of "Plot" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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== Plot of historical events ==
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== Plot in writing history ==
  
[[Epistemology|Epistemological]] historian [[Paul Veyne]] (1971: 46-47; English trans. by Min Moore-Rinvolucri 1984: 32-33) applies the concept to real-life events, defining ''plot'' as “the fabric of history,” a [[system]] of interconnected historical facts:
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While plot is an element of fiction, there are element of plot in any form of storytelling.[[Epistemology|Epistemological]] historian [[Paul Veyne]] (1971: 46-47; English trans. by Min Moore-Rinvolucri 1984: 32-33) applies the concept to real-life events, defining ''plot'' as “the fabric of history,” a [[system]] of interconnected historical facts:
 
<blockquote>“Facts do not exist in isolation, in the sense that the fabric of history is what we shall call a plot, a very human and not very ‘scientific’ mixture of material causes, aims, and chances—a slice of life, in short, that the historian cuts as he [sic] wills and in which facts have their objective connections and relative importance...the word plot has the advantage of reminding us that what the historian studies is as human as a play or a novel....then what are the facts worthy of rousing the interest of the historian? All depends on the plot chosen; a fact is interesting or uninteresting...in history as in the theater, to show everything is impossible—not because it would require too many pages, but because there is no elementary historical fact, no event worthy atom. If one ceases to see events in their plots, one is sucked into the abyss of the infinitesimal.”</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>“Facts do not exist in isolation, in the sense that the fabric of history is what we shall call a plot, a very human and not very ‘scientific’ mixture of material causes, aims, and chances—a slice of life, in short, that the historian cuts as he [sic] wills and in which facts have their objective connections and relative importance...the word plot has the advantage of reminding us that what the historian studies is as human as a play or a novel....then what are the facts worthy of rousing the interest of the historian? All depends on the plot chosen; a fact is interesting or uninteresting...in history as in the theater, to show everything is impossible—not because it would require too many pages, but because there is no elementary historical fact, no event worthy atom. If one ceases to see events in their plots, one is sucked into the abyss of the infinitesimal.”</blockquote>
  

Revision as of 03:46, 11 August 2008


In narrative, plot is a literary technique; it is the rendering and ordering of the events and actions of a story, particularly towards the achievement of some particular artistic or emotional effect.

Story arc

Plot is often schematically represented as an arc reflecting the rising action described in the following phases:

  1. Initial situation – the beginning. It is the first incident that makes the story move.
  2. Conflict or Problem – goal which the main character of the story has to achieve.
  3. Complication or Rising action – obstacles which the main character has to overcome.
  4. Climax – highest point of interest of the story.
  5. Dénouement or Resolution – what happens to the character after overcoming all obstacles and reaching his goal, or failing to achieve the desired result and not reaching his goal.
  6. Conclusion – the end result

As with all such generalizations, the schemata has some merit but fails to account for the totality of different plot possibilities. A more systematic approach was offered by literary critics in the 20th century, especially those associated with Formalism.

History

Aristotle

Aristotle discussed plot in his classic work on tragedy, Poetics. According to Aristotle's Poetics, Tragedy contains 6 parts: plot, character, diction, reasoning, spectacular, and lyric poetry. “Plot (mythos) is the source and soul of tragedy followed in decreasing order of importance by the character (ethe), thought (dianonia), language (lexis), and music and stagecraft”[1]. “Of the six parts of tragedy, plot, characters, diction (speech), thought, spectacle, song (cf. VI, 1449b 31–1450b 21)[2] the plot is not only the "most important part" but even "the first principle, and, as it were, the soul of a tragedy; the characters come only in second place" [3][4]. “The plot must be "complete" and "whole" in that it must have a clearly recognizable beginning, middle, and end. That is why good plots should "neither begin nor end haphazardly" [5], but be linked by causal necessity or probability; one criterion for the "completeness" of a plot is "that the whole plot will be disjointed and disturbed if any one of its parts is displaced or removed" [6][7]. For Aristotle, the purpose of tragedy was catharsis of emotion. Thus, the goal of the plot was to produce affect in the veiwer. “The emotional effect peculiar to the tragic action is therefore that of promoting the experience of feelings such as pity and terror, which constitutes the ultimate end at which the representation of the mythos aims” [8].

Formalism

Fabula and sjuzhet

The Russian Formalists, especially Viktor Shklovsky and Boris Eichenbaum, introduced the distinction between fabula and sjezhet. Previously plot was considered to be a part of the content. However, the formalists argued convincingly that the plot was part of the formal property of the text. [9]

The fabula, or fable was the basic material from which the story was constructed–what the Formalists referred to as the literary быть (byt'), or given. In one famous example, Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina was described as the story of an adultress who meets an unhappy end. However, the sjuzhet, or plot of the story is the twists and turns of the narrative based on the author's deployment of the literary devices used to tell the story. The fabula refers to what is narrated, the sjuzhet, or plot, refers to how it is told. The author uses a variety of plot techiques, or devices.

Plot devices

Plot devices are the literary techniques that the author uses to advance the plot. The author's narrative style is based on the types of narrative techiques, or plot device that the author employs. There are numerous stock plot devices. An example of some plot devices include:

  • Flashback, general term for altering time sequences, taking characters back to the beginning of the tale, for instance.
  • Foreshadowing, hinting at events to occur later.
  • Frame story, or a story within a story, where a main story is used to organize a series of shorter stories. Early examples include Panchatantra, Arabian Nights and The Decameron. A more modern example is Brian Jacques The Legend of Luke.
  • Framing device, the usage of a single action, scene, event, setting, or any element of significance at the beginning and end of a work.
  • Chekhov's gun, the insertion of an object of apparent irrelevance early on in a narrative, the purpose of which is only revealed later on in the story.
  • Defamiliarization, technique of forcing the reader to recognize common things in an unfamiliar or strange way, in order to enhance perception of the familiar.
  • Deus ex machina (God out of the Machine), a plot device dating back to ancient Greek theater, where the primary conflict is resolved through a means that seems unrelated to the story (i.e. a God comes down out of nowhere and solves everything, saving the character from peril). In modern times, the Deus ex machina is often considered a clumsy method, to be avoided in order not to frustrate readers or viewers.


Subplot

In addition to the main plot, a story may have one or more subplots. The main plot is sometimes called the A-Plot while a subplot may be referred to as the B-Plot.

Suspension of disbelief

Suspension of disbelief is the reader's temporary acceptance of story elements as believable, regardless of how implausible they may seem in real life.

Forms

Plots have been developed in a wide range of genres and forms: tragic, comedy, romance, satire.

The term plot-driven is sometimes used to describe fiction in which a preconceived storyline is the main thrust, with the characters' behavior being molded by this inevitable sequence of events. Plot-driven is regarded as being the opposite of character-driven, in which the character is the main focus of the work.


Plot in writing history

While plot is an element of fiction, there are element of plot in any form of storytelling.Epistemological historian Paul Veyne (1971: 46-47; English trans. by Min Moore-Rinvolucri 1984: 32-33) applies the concept to real-life events, defining plot as “the fabric of history,” a system of interconnected historical facts:

“Facts do not exist in isolation, in the sense that the fabric of history is what we shall call a plot, a very human and not very ‘scientific’ mixture of material causes, aims, and chances—a slice of life, in short, that the historian cuts as he [sic] wills and in which facts have their objective connections and relative importance...the word plot has the advantage of reminding us that what the historian studies is as human as a play or a novel....then what are the facts worthy of rousing the interest of the historian? All depends on the plot chosen; a fact is interesting or uninteresting...in history as in the theater, to show everything is impossible—not because it would require too many pages, but because there is no elementary historical fact, no event worthy atom. If one ceases to see events in their plots, one is sucked into the abyss of the infinitesimal.”

See also

  • Dramatic structure
  • Plot device
  • Plot hole
  • Georges Polti's The Thirty-Six Dramatic Situations

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bickham, Jack M. Scene & Sequel: How to Construct Fiction with Scene-by-scene Flow, Logic and Readability. Cincinnati, OH: Writer's Digest Books, 1993.  ISBN 0898795516 ISBN 9780898795516

External links

  • Movie Plots - movieplots.googlepages.com. Retrieved November 3, 2007.

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  1. Rizzoli, Renato. Representation and Ideology in Jacobean Drama; The Politics of the Coup De Theatre. New York: The Edwin Mellen Press, 1999.
  2. Aristotle, W. Rhys Roberts, and Ingram Bywater. The Rhetoric and Poetics of Aristotle. New York: The Modern Library, 1984.
  3. 1450a 15 and 38–39
  4. Eggs, Ekkehard. "Doxa in Poetry: a Study of Aristotle's Poetics." Poetics Today 23 (2002): 395-426.
  5. 1450b 33–34
  6. 1451a 32–33
  7. Egg, 408
  8. Rizzoli 11
  9. Victor Erlich, Russian Formalism: History - Doctrine, p. 240.