Across
- 3. Presentation the writer tells readers what kind of personality the character possesses rather than allowing the character to show his or her personality and allowing readers to draw their own conclusions
- 4. Characters more complex than stock/flat characters, often display inconsistencies and internal conflicts akin to what real people do; more fully developed, harder to summarize
- 7. the process by which a writer makes a character seem real to the reader
- 9. uses contradictory statements or situations to reveal a reality different from what seems to be true
- 10. Characters embody stereotypes such as “dumb blonde” or “mean stepfather”; characters become types rather than individuals
Down
- 1. Characters embodies one or two qualities, ideas or traits that can easily be described in a brief summary; aren’t psychologically complex
- 2. Presentation the writer presents the character in action, allowing the reader to draw his or her own conclusions about the personality of that character
- 5. the main character in a narrative, the central character who engages the reader’s interest and empathy
- 6. of View refers to who tells us a story and how it is told; what we know and how we feel about the events in a work are shaped by the author’s perspective
- 8. literary device in which characters or events represent specific abstractions or ideas
