Writing Tips for
Story Structure & Storytelling
by Melanie Anne Phillips
Creator StoryWeaver,
Co-Creator Dramatica
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Does your story suffer from “Multiple Personality Disorder”?
In psychology, Multiple Personality Disorder describes a person who
has more than one complete personality. Typically, only one of those
personalities will be active at any given time. This is because they
usually share attributes, and so only one can have that attribute at any
particular moment.
Stories can also suffer from Multiple Personality Disorder if more
than one character represents a single attribute. In such a case, both
should not be able to appear in the story at the same time. If they do,
the audience feels that the story is fragmented, or more simply put, the
story has developed a split-personality.
Dramatica sees a story as representing a single mind. Most writers
have been taught that characters, plot, theme, and genre are people,
doing things, illustrating value standards, in an overall setting and
mood. In contrast, Dramatica sees characters, plot, theme, and genre as
representing different “families of thought” which go on in the
story mind as it grapples with a central problem.
Characters are the “drives” of the Story Mind, which often
conflict as they do in real people. Plot describes the methods used by
the Story Mind in an attempt to find a solution to its central problem.
Theme represents the Story Mind’s conflicting value standards, which
must be played out one against another to determine the best way of
evaluating the problem. Genre describes the Story Mind’s overall
personality.
Traditional story theory states that each character must be a
complete person to be believable to an audience. But because the
characters represent the independent drives of a single Story Mind, each
is not really a complete person but is rather a facet of a complete
mind. In fact, if you make each character complete, they will all be
overlapping, and will give your story a split-personality.
It is in the story TELLING stage where characters take on the
trappings of a complete person, not in the story STRUCTURE. Each
character needs to be given traits and interests which round out the
character’s “presence,” making it feel like a real human being.
But these trappings and traits are not part of the dramatic structure.
They are just window dressing – clothes for the facets to wear so the
audience can better relate to them on a personal level.
Think about the characters you have seen in successful stories. They
might represent Reason, Emotion, Skepticism, or function as the
Protagonist or Antagonist, for example. Each of these kinds of
characters is an “archetype” because it contains a whole family of
drives in one character. For example, a Protagonist may contain the
drive to “pursue,” and also the drive to be a self-starter ,
“pro-action.” Because these drives work together in harmony, the
character becomes archetypal.
The individual drives don’t have to be bundled in an archetype,
however. In fact, each single drive might be assigned to a different
character, creating a multitude of simple characters. Or, characters
might get several drives but conflicting ones. These characters are more
“complex” because their internal make-up is not completely
consistent.
Regardless of how the drives (also called character “elements”)
are assigned, each drive should appear in one and only one character. If
not, your story may develop Multiple Personality Disorder and leave your
audience unable to relate to the story as a whole.
Copyright Melanie Anne Phillips
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