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Narrative story.pptx

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Narrative story.pptx

  1. 1. NARRATIVE STORY Quronboeva Saida
  2. 2. WHAT IS NARRATIVE WRITING?  Narrative writing is, essentially, story writing. A narrative can be fiction or nonfiction, and it can also occupy the space between these as a semi-autobiographical story, historical fiction, or a dramatized retelling of actual events. As long as a piece tells a story through a narrative structure, it’s narrative writing.
  3. 3. TYPES OF NARRATIVE WRITING Linear narrative Nonlinear narrative Viewpoint narrative Descriptive narrative
  4. 4. LINEAR NARRATIVE  With a linear narrative, a story’s events are told in chronological order. Most books, movies, TV shows, and other pieces of media are linear narratives. With a linear narrative, each scene is followed by the next logical scene. There can be gaps between scenes, such as a book’s third chapter taking place two years after its second chapter’s events.  Another specific type of linear narrative you may have encountered is the historical narrative. A historical narrative follows a linear timeline to tell the story of an actual event or series of events.
  5. 5. NONLINEAR NARRATIVE  In contrast to a linear narrative, a nonlinear narrative presents its story’s events in nonchronological order. A well-known example of a nonlinear narrative is House of Leaves, a novel told through first- person narration, recovered documents, and footnotes throughout the book.
  6. 6. VIEWPOINT NARRATIVE A viewpoint narrative focuses on the narrator’s perspective of the story’s events. Generally, these kinds of stories are more character driven than plot driven. The Catcher in the Rye is one of the most popular examples of a viewpoint narrative
  7. 7. DESCRIPTIVE NARRATIVE  In a descriptive narrative, the focus is on how the story’s setting, characters, and objects look and feel. The goal here is total immersion in the world of the story; this is different from how a viewpoint narrative strives to create immersion in a character’s inner world, a limited perspective on the world of the story. A well-known example of a descriptive narrative is Edgar Allan Poe’s short story The Tell-Tale Heart.
  8. 8. CHARACTERISTICS OF NARRATIVE WRITING Each type of writing has its own unique characteristics, and narrative writing is no different.
  9. 9. Descriptive language: This type of language evokes feelings rather than directly stating facts. Descriptive language techniques include metaphors, similes, personification, and onomatopoeia.
  10. 10.  Characters. Among the characters, nearly every narrative needs to have a protagonist. The protagonist, also known as the main character, is the character whose story is being told as they work toward a goal or face a challenge.  Another character found in nearly every narrative is the antagonist. The antagonist isn’t necessarily the “bad guy”; they are simply the character or force imposing obstacles for the protagonist to overcome. In many narratives, the antagonist is a person, a force of nature, the protagonist’s society, or even an aspect of the protagonist’s personality.
  11. 11. Plot: The plot is the series of events that happen in your narrative. A plot can be simple, with only one or two events, or it can be complex and multi-layered. Narrative structure: Every narrative, even nonlinear narratives, is organized in some way. This is how the main character pursues their goal or faces the challenge presented to them. No matter how you structure your narrative, it has three distinct parts:
  12. 12.  The beginning: This is where the reader meets your writing. Hooking their attention at the beginning is crucial.  The middle: The middle of your story or essay is where the action happens. This is where your protagonist faces one or more conflicts and reaches the climax, the point where the narrative pivots to the falling action after the protagonist either meets or fails to meet their goal.  The end: After the narrative’s climax, the ending wraps up loose story threads, satisfies readers’ remaining curiosities, and positions the protagonist for life after the story’s events.

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