ELEMENTS OF A SHORT STORY
1. Setting
— refers to place, time, weather condition, social condition, and even moodor atmosphere.
To recognize the setting of the story, you may ask these questions:
-Where is the action taking place?
-Where is the story taking place? Is it during the day, night, what year, what period?
-What is the weather condition? Is it sunny, rainy, and stormy?
-What is the daily life of the character? What are his customs and status in life?
-What is the feeling created at the beginning of the story? Is it bright, cheerful, darker
frightening?
Example: My sister and I had a fun–filled vacation last summer. We stayed at our grandparents’
house, which was near the beach. We swam in the sea every morning, climbed the trees in the
afternoon and fed the animals before dark. When the moon was bright, we played patintero.
Using the guide questions above, provide the answers:
Where is the action taking place? _________________________
Where is the story taking place? __________________________
What is the weather condition? ___________________________
2. Plot
– It is the sequence of events in a story or play. The plot is a planned, logicalseries of events having a
beginning, middle and end. The short story usually has one plot, and it could be read in one sitting .There
are five essential parts of a plot:
a. Exposition/Introduction
In the introduction, the setting and the characters are revealed.
b. Rising Action
This is where the events in the story become complicated and the conflict in the story is revealed
.This is where events between introduction and climax take place.
c. Climax
It is the turning point of the story and the highest point of interest. It is where the reader asks what will happen
next. Will the conflict be resolved or not?
d. Falling Action
The problems and complications begin to be resolved.
e. Denouement
This is the final outcome or untangling of events in the story.
Here are three different parts of a story. On the blank after each paragraph, write whether the
given part is the beginning, middle and end of the story.
Suddenly, the boat tilted to the left. “Steady!” cried our teacher, “stay where you are!” We kept
calm .We prayed hard and followed all of our teacher’s instructions.
Answer:
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Finally, the fox grumbled. “I don’t want those grapes anyway. I know they must be sour.”Then,
he went away.
Answer:
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Once there was a child who liked summer best. He lived on a farm and every summer, he
enjoyed harvesting corn, vegetables and fruits.
Answer:
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3. Conflict
- It is the opposition of forces which ties one incident to another and makes the plot move.
There are two types of conflict:
a. External
– refers to outside forces that may cause conflict, like another human being, circumstances,
environment, etc.
b. Internal
- refers a struggle within oneself. The character maybe debating inside himself about what to do.
4. Character
– There are two meanings for the word character
: the person in a work of fiction and the characteristics of a person. He may be the protagonist, the
good natured character, or the antagonist, the opponent of the main character. The author may
reveal a character in several ways: his physical appearance, what he/she says, thinks feels and
dreams; what he/she does or does not do; and what others say about him/her.
5. Point of View
– the angle from which the story is told