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REVIEWER-FOR-APPRENTICESHIP.docx

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REVIEWER FOR APPRENTICESHIP&EXPLORATION IN ARTS PRODUCTION - ***[CHARACTER]***- the identity\'s appearance, presence, personality, capabilities, mannerisms and quirks. - ***[CONFLICT-]*** It is a major element of narrative or dramatic structure that creates challenges in a story by add...

REVIEWER FOR APPRENTICESHIP&EXPLORATION IN ARTS PRODUCTION - ***[CHARACTER]***- the identity\'s appearance, presence, personality, capabilities, mannerisms and quirks. - ***[CONFLICT-]*** It is a major element of narrative or dramatic structure that creates challenges in a story by adding uncertainty as to whether the goal will be achieved. - ***[SETTING-]*** The major elements are the time, the place, and the social environment that frames the characters. - ***[THEME-]*** It is a central, unifying idea. It\'s the bigger issue that emerges as the characters pursue their goals. - ***[PLOT -]*** Describes the events and their significance as the story unfolds. - ***[POINT OF VIEW-]*** Who expressed through the author\'s use of pronouns, which reveal the narrator\'s position. - ***[STYLE]***- Encompasses author choices like perspective and tense, word choice, sentence variety, showing and telling, and voice. - ***[CLIMAX-]*** It is often the most exciting part of the story. - ***[EXPOSITION-]*** It is the background information on the characters and setting explained at the beginning of the story. [ ] - ***[DYNAMIC CHARACTER-]*** A character who goes through some sort of change. - ***[STATIC CHARACTER-]*** A character who does not change throughout the course of the story. - ***[ROUND CHARACTER]***- A character who is a fully-developed figure. - ***[3^rd^ Person in point of view]***- the narrator is not part of the story and the characters never acknowledge the narrator\'s presence. - ***[INFORMATIVE TONE]***- When the speaker wishes to communicate a knowledge of something. - ***[HUMOROUS TONE-]*** Depending on the circumstances, comedy is a highly effective technique. - ***[OPTIMISTIC TONE-]*** They are hopeful and tend to focus on the positive side of things. [ ] - ***[ASSERTIVE TONE-]*** It is usually used in writing when the writer is trying to make a strong point. - ***[LINEAR PLOT]*** - It has a beginning, middle, and end and is constructed chronologically***[. ]*** - ***[EPISODIC -]***A series of chapters or stories linked together by the same character, place, or theme but held apart by their individual plot, purpose, and subtext***[.]*** - ***[PARALLEL PLOT-]*** These are plots in which each main character has a separate but related story line that merges in the end***[.]*** - ***[ANTAGONIST-]*** It plays an important role in story development. It could be a human enemy. - ***[PROTAGONIST-]*** Sometimes called the main character. - ***[FLAT CHARACTER-]*** They are characters that are mostly one-dimensional and don\'t have a lot of backstory or depth. - ***[TIME]***- The continued sequence of existence and events that occurs in an apparently irreversible succession from the past, through the present, and into the future. - ***[ELAPSED TIME]***- The minutes, hours, days, weeks, and months a story encompasses must be somehow accounted for or the reader will feel confused and the story. - ***[TEMPORAL SETTING]***- it focuses on the time of a setting (19th-century Victorian Era) - ***[INDIVIDUAL SETTING]***- A specific locations and times of a story. - ***[FICTION]*** - A specific locations and times of a story. - ***[SCIENCE FICTION- A]*** genre of speculative fiction that contains imagined elements that don\'t exist in the real world. - ***[ROMANCE GENRE]***- Includes verse or prose works dedicated to idealism and often associated with love and daring deeds. - ***FANTASY***- The author\'s use of narrative elements that do not have to rely on history or nature to be coherent. - ***PERSON VS. PERSON***- This kind of conflict exists in nearly every book you read, but some famous examples include: Batman vs the Joker. Superman vs Lex Luther. Harry Potter vs Voldemort. - ***PERSON VS. SOCIETY*** - This kind of conflict exists in nearly every book you read, but some famous examples include: Batman vs the Joker. Superman vs Lex Luther. Harry Potter vs Voldemort. - ***PERSON VS. FATE***- Luck, chance, kismet, karma. the universal principle or ultimate agency by which the order of things is presumably prescribed; the decreed cause of events.

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