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A plot structure, also called a dramatic structure is the overall design or structure of a story and how the story elements are arranged.
To help you analyse the plot, it is important to understand what the structural elements of the plot are.
Every story has a beginning or exposition, with something that leads to conflict in the middle, before it is resolved and the story concludes.
To help you understand the plot structure, here is a graph that illustrates the structural elements of Sophiatown.
Now let us look at the definitions of each element to understand what they mean.
Exposition |
The exposition is the explanation (usually at the beginning of a story) of the events leading up to the start of the plot.
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Inciting incident |
The first time we realise that all is not well. Something that sets off the conflict in the story.
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Rising action |
The building up of conflict in the plot.
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Conflict |
The struggle between characters, or between individuals and their circumstances.
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Climax |
The highest point in the development of the conflict, the moment of greatest intensity and tension.
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Final solution (dénouement) |
The final part of the story where everything is made clear.
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Conclusion | The way the story is rounded off. |