MHS Composition Guide

Literary Analysis guide

Manuscript Form
General Rules
Title Page
Outline Page
Body of Paper

Writing a Good Composition
Guidelines
Writing Conference
Grading Standards
Correcting Compositions

Literary Analysis Guide
Plot
Characters
Setting
Tone
Style
Point of View
Narrative Technique
Structure
Theme

Approaches to Literary Criticisim
Biographical
Historical
Geographical
Political  
Philosophical &
Religious

Sociological/
Anthropological

Psychological


Characters

Lifelikeness

  • Fictional characters do not have to be just like real human beings.  There is a difference.  However, they should be believable.

  • Characters are not free to act as they please; the author creates an illusion of freedom.

  • "Lifelikeness" must sometimes be sacrificed for the plot, theme, or unity of the work as a whole

Relevance

  • Is the character someone you can understand and relate to on some level

  • Characters can represent some universal quality (archetypal), or be eccentric individuals.

  • Characters may resemble ourselves and people we know or may represent a universal quality that exists in all of us.

Judging characters

  • How is this character relevant to the reader?

  • How does he/she contribute to the story as a whole?

Simple characters

  • May be stereotypes, or embodiments of a single characteristic; usually play major roles only in bad fiction.

  • May be one-sided characters who do not represent universal types; predictable characters.

  • Simple characters are often used to fulfill minor roles in the novel.

Complex characters

  • These are more difficult to achieve.

  • More lifelike than simple characters.

  • Capable of surprising us.

  • Gradations of complexity may exist

  • Character should be unified; i.e., should not act "out of character": consistency and believability are important.

Methods of character portrayal

  • Discursive method:  narrator tells their qualities

Disadvantage:  discourages reader's use of imagination.

Advantage:  saves time

  • Dramatic method: author allows characters to reveal themselves by how they act and speak.

Advantage:  characters are more lifelike; involves reader's participation.

Disadvantage:  takes more time and allows for possibility of misjudging characters.

  • Characters talk about other characters; information is not necessarily reliable.

  • Mixing methods:  most common and most effective

Development of character: does the person grow in the novel?

Motivation:  point where plot and characters come together; plot is what characters do; motivation is why they do it.

Author may stress either plot or character; it is how they blend that matters.