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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: traits of all great characters, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. A New World Order


In the 60s, Curtis Mayfield sings of a new world order, a change of mind for the whole human race. Marie Elena Gaspari dances to it in the 90s. The old world order falling away.


Isn't that what the Universal Story form is really all about? Okay, go ahead. Roll your eyes. But stick with me here. 

The old world order (ordinary world) falls away at the 1/4 mark. The story launches into a new world order (exotic world of the antagonists / the Middle 1/2).

Antagonists from each of the Five Standard Antagonists serve to trip up the protagonist on her way toward her life goals. The concept of all the other characters (because for the most part, all the characters are antagonists -- perhaps shapeshifting from ally to antagonist, but nearly all the characters challenge the protagonist in one way or the other). 

Each of the characters hold up a mirror for the protagonist to better see herself. Yes, even the antagonists. Especially the antagonists.

I am a devout student of plot, the elements of great fiction, the Universal Story form, Character, Action, and Theme. I also am a devotee of physics / the study of energy. Forgive me when I interchange the two. 

The energy of a story pretty much ebbs and flow like the energy of our lives. It takes until the Crisis (3/4 mark) before the protagonist comes to understand what the antagonists represent in her life. For us? Sometime, it takes until the very end of our lives before we finally understand what the antagonists in our own lives really represent to us and about ourselves. 

In the end, the character and, in turn, we come to understand that the antagonists, be they someone else, society at large, nature, machines, time is nothing more than a reflection of us giving up our own individual power to what we perceive as an authority over our lives.

In real life, we can play the victim. 

Not possible in stories. No matter how insecure the protagonist may act, or fearful, no matter how small they play their parts, how much power they relinquish, how poor, how weak, characters in a story never let themselves be victimized, at least not for long. Ever. 

An interesting message.

The lesson, gift, elixir the protagonist is given in the depths of despair -- Crisis -- (thanks to the very antagonists who caused her the most grief) she eventually brings back to the ordinary world which ultimately, because of the character's transformation, also transforms and allows for a new world order to emerge. 

The work of heroes and heroines in stories and... of common folk, like you and me...

1 Comments on A New World Order, last added: 7/16/2009
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