parenthetical observation, subplot, shift in style

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Brandon Clayton Elliot Somers

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Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style. Brandon Clayton Elliot Somers. Parenthetical Observation. When the author temporarily shifts from the initial structure in a new direction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

Brandon ClaytonElliot Somers

Page 2: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

When the author temporarily shifts from the initial structure in a new direction.

It is a brief interruption during which the character or the narrator reflects on a minor point that seizes his attention.

Page 3: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

“Now wheter it be Bestial oblivion, or some craven scrupleOf thinking too precisely on th’event-A thought which, quartered, hath but one

part wisdomAnd ever three parts coward-I do not knowWhy yet I live to say ‘This things’s to do.’-Hamlet

Page 4: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

Secondary stories that parallel or contest with the main plot.

Characters in the subplot may have a major impact on the characters in the main plot, or they may simply mirror some aspect of it, in either precise or distorted form.

Page 5: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

Much Ado about Nothing by Shakespeare Claudio and Hero Benedick and Beatrice

Page 6: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

A narrative may also shift structure by introducing a marked change in style, usually accompanied by corresponding alteration in tone.

Page 7: Parenthetical Observation, Subplot, Shift in Style

“If my right ear itched, then something good was being said about me by somebody…If I covered a mirror when storm was raging, the lighting would not strike me…If I walked in my sleep, then God was trying to lead me somewhere to do a good deed for him.”

“Anything seemed possible, likely, feasible, because I wanted everything to be possible…Because I had no power to make thing happen outside of me in the objective world, I made things happen within. Because my environment was bare and bleak, I endowed it with unlimited potentialities, redeemed it for the sake of my own hungry and cloudy yearning.”