Thomas Funicello's Blog - Posts Tagged "hypothesis"

Story Quarters

In a previous post I discussed the concept of breaking down your story into Act Parts or quarters: Thesis, Hypothesis, Antithesis, and Synthesis.
This quartering concept can be used to further breakdown your story. Here is my method:
A story has 4 quarters called Act Parts (Act I, Act IIa, Act IIb, Act III).
Each Act Part has 4 quarters called Sequences.
Each Sequence has 4 quarters called Scenes.
Each Scene has 4 quarters called Segments.
Each Segment has 4 quarters called Elements.
Each Element has 4 quarters called Moments.
These are the terms I prefer to use; they may not align with industry terms, but I find this concept critical.
This structure helps me know what should be happening at any point in the story.
Once again, a good story structure is not to be rigid or restrictive, it should help a writer track events, emotions, and knowledge.
Next time I will discuss External Pressures and Internal Responses
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Hero Flaws

The main character must learn critical lessons from their flaws and problems to succeed or survive. These lessons are best represented as Flaws, Secrets and Problems. The main character starts off as flawed and must overcome the triggers and beliefs that hold him or her back from becoming the Hero of the story. Some of the issues the main character must overcome are: External Problems, Internal Problems, Flaws, Secrets, and a Tragic Flaw. These various issues may not all be present but the ones that need addressing will continue to trigger reactions and choices that cause problems until they are overcome. Each time there is a surprise or crisis it is a good time to trigger a Flaw. It is the story finale where the Hero has resolved the issues and flaws, and any secret or false belief is out in the open.
Thomas Funicello
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