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Understanding and Analyzing Literature Elements of Fiction Created by Jimmie at jimmiescollage.com Table of Contents Page 2 Graphics for your own projects Page 3 Poster Pages 4-7 Banners (with and without definitions) Page 8-9 Labels, Flashcards, or Minibooks Pages 10-15 Notebooking Pages Pages 16-18 Notetaking Pages Soup Ingredients C Carrot/Character P Pepper/Plot S Salt/Setting T Tomato/Theme P Potato/Point of View C Corn/ Conflict

Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

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Page 1: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

Understanding and Analyzing

Literature

Ele

men

ts o

f Fi

ctio

n

Created by Jimmie at jimmiescollage.com

Table of Contents Page 2 Graphics for your own projects Page 3 Poster Pages 4-7 Banners (with and without definitions) Page 8-9 Labels, Flashcards, or Minibooks Pages 10-15 Notebooking Pages Pages 16-18 Notetaking Pages

Soup Ingredients C — Carrot/Character P — Pepper/Plot S — Salt/Setting T — Tomato/Theme P — Potato/Point of View C — Corn/ Conflict

Page 2: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

Ele

men

ts o

f Fi

ctio

n

Page 3: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

POINT OF VIEW

PLOT

CONFLICT

THEME

Elements of Fiction

CHARACTER

Page 4: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

THEME

CHARACTER

Page 5: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

CONFLICT

POINT OF VIEW

PLOT

Page 6: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

THEME

CHARACTER

The time and place.

The main message, sometimes a

moral, but always an abstract

and universal idea.

Individuals,

usually people.

Page 7: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

CONFLICT

POINT OF VIEW

PLOT The action of the story;

the sequence of events.

The problem the main charac-

ter faces: man versus man,

nature, society , or self.

The perspective from which the story is told:

first person (I/me) or third person—a) objective/

camera, b) limited, or c) omniscient.

Page 8: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

THEME

CHARACTER

CONFLICT

POINT Of VIEW

PLOT

Page 9: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

THEME

CHARACTER

CONFLICT

POINT Of VIEW

PLOT

The time and place.

The main message, sometimes a

moral, but always an abstract and

universal idea.

The action of the story;

the sequence of events.

The problem the main character faces:

Man versus man Man versus nature

Man versus society Man versus self

Individuals, usually people.

The perspective from which the story

is told: first person (I/me) or third

person—a) objective/camera,

b) limited, or c) omniscient.

Page 10: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

Page 11: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

THEME

Page 12: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

CHARACTER

Page 13: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

POINT OF VIEW

Page 14: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

PLOT

Page 15: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

CONFLICT

Page 16: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

CHARACTER

POINT Of VIEW

Individuals, usually people.

The perspective from which the story is

told: first person (I/me) or third

person—a) objective/camera,

b) limited, or c) omniscient.

Page 17: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

CONFLICT

PLOT The action of the story;

the sequence of events.

The problem the main character faces:

Man versus man Man versus nature

Man versus society Man versus self

Page 18: Understanding Fiction Literature and Analyzing - Jimmie’s Collage

SETTING

THEME

The time and place.

The main message, sometimes a

moral, but always an abstract and

universal idea.