Literary Elements Setting, Theme, Plot, Point of View Setting • The time and place of a story, poem, or play. • The setting can help create mood or atmosphere. • The setting can also affect the events of the plot. Setting • In some stories, the conflict is provided by the setting. This happens in “The Dog of Pompeii” when the characters’ lives are threatened by a volcano. Theme • A truth about life revealed in a work of literature. It is a lesson or moral that the author wants to teach you through the plot of the story. • A theme is not the same as a subject. A subject can usually be expressed in a word or two – live, childhood, death. • A theme is the idea the author wished to reveal about that subject. Theme • A theme has to be expressed in a full sentence. • A work can have more than one theme • A theme is not usually stated directly in the work. Instead the reader has to think about the elements of the work and then make an inference about what they all mean. Theme • Think about the story “Charlotte’s Web”. • What theme or themes do you think the author is trying to get across to the reader? Plot • The series of related events that make up a story. • Plot tells “what happens” in a short story, novel, play, or narrative poem. Plot • Most plots are built around the following elements: – Introduction (learn characters and conflict) – Complications arise as the characters take steps to resolve the conflict – Climax (plot reaches the most exciting moment) – Resolution (characters’ problems are solved and the story ends) Point of View • The vantage point from which the a story is told. • There are two common points of view: – 1st Person POV – one of the characters from the story is telling the story. Uses the pronoun I. All information about the story must come from this one narrator. – 3rd Person POV – the narrator is NOT a character in the story. Characters • • • • • Believable personalities in a story They do NOT have to be people or animals. They can be anything you want as long as they are believable.