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Dramatica Theory Book
Chapter
2: The Elements of Structure (Continued)
The Four Throughlines
It is not enough,
however, to develop a complete Story Mind. That only creates the argument
the audience will be considering. Equally important is how the audience
is positioned relative to that argument.
Does an author want the audience to examine a problem dispassionately
or to experience what it is like to have that problem? Is it more important
to explore a possible solution or to weigh the benefits and drawbacks
of alternative solutions? In fact, all of these points of view must be
developed for a story to be complete.
An author's argument must go beyond telling audience members what to look
at. I must also show them how to see it. It is the relationship between
object and observer that creates perspective, and in stories, perspective
creates meaning.
There are four different perspectives which must be explored as a story
unfolds in order to present all sides of the issue at the heart of a story.
They are the Objective Story Throughline, theMain Character
Throughline, theObstacle Character Throughline, and theSubjective
Story Throughline.
The Objective Story Throughline
The first perspective
is from the Objective Story Throughline, so called because
it is the most dispassionate look at the Story Mind.
Imagine the argument of a story as a battle between two armies. The Objective
Story view is like that of a general on a hill overlooking the battle.
The general focuses on unfolding strategies and, from this perspective,
sees soldiers not by name but by their function on the field: foot soldier,
grenadier, cavalryman, scout. Though the general may care very much for
the soldiers, he must concentrate on the events as they unfold. Because
it emphasizes events, the Objective Story Throughline is
often thought of as plot, but as we shall see later, plot is so much more.
The Main Character Throughline
For a story to be
complete, the audience will need another view of the battle as well: that
of the soldier in the trenches. Instead of looking at the Story Mind from
the outside, the Main Character Throughline is a
view from the inside. What if that Story Mind were our own?
That is what the audience experiences when it becomes a soldier on the
field: audience members identify with the Main Character of the story.
Through the Main Character we experience the battle as if we were directly
participating in it. From this perspective we are much more concerned
with what is happening immediately around us than we are with the larger
strategies that are really too big to see. This most personally involved
argument of the story is the Main Character Throughline.
As we shall explore shortly, the Main Character does not have to be the
soldier leading the charge in the battle as a whole. Our Main Character
might be any of the soldiers on the field: the cook, the medic, the bugler,
or even the recruit cowering in the bushes.
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