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Dramatica Theory Book
Chapter
2: The Elements of Structure (Continued)
Summary - The Grand
Argument Story
We have described
a story as a battle. The overview that takes in the full scope of the
battle is the Objective Story Throughline.
Within the fray is one special soldier through whom we experience the
battle first-hand. How he fares is the Main Character Throughline.
The Main Character is confronted by another soldier, blocking the path.
Is he friend or foe? Either way, he is an obstacle, and the exploration
of his impact on the Main Character is the Obstacle Character Throughline.
The Main and Obstacle Characters engage in a skirmish. Main says, "Get
out of my way!", and Obstacle says, "Change course!" In
the end, the steadfast resolution of one will force the other to change.
The growth of this interchange constitutes the Subjective Story Throughline.
Taken together, the four throughlines comprise the author's argument to
the audience. They answer the questions: What does it feel like to have
this kind of problem? What's the other side of the issue? Which perspective
is the most appropriate for dealing with that problem? What do things
look like in the "big picture?"
Only through the development of these four simultaneous throughlines can
the Story Mind truly reflect our own minds, pitting reason against emotion
and immediate advantage against experience in the hope of resolving a
problem in the most beneficial manner.
Moving On
Now that you've added
Story Mind, Objective Story Throughline, Main Character Throughline, Obstacle
Character Throughline, and Subjective Story Throughline to your writer's
vocabulary, you have all the background you need to explore a whole new
world of understanding: the Dramatica Theory of Story.
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