— How Many Plots Are There?
According to Christopher Booker’s 2004 book, The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories, there are seven of them:
1. Tragedy. This usually involves a hero with a fatal flaw meeting a tragic end. Macbeth or Madame Bovary are obvious candidates. Others might be The Picture of Dorian Gray, Julius Caesar and Anna Karenina. Tragedy illustrates the consequences of human overreaching and egotism.
2. Comedy. This is not always synonymous with humour but it does come with a happy ending, typically of romantic fulfilment as in Jane Austen. Other examples would include Shakespeare’s comedies, The Marriage of Figaro, the plays of Oscar Wilde and Gilbert and Sullivan, and maybe War and Peace. Confusion reigns until at last the hero and heroine are united in love.
3. Overcoming the Monster. As in Frankenstein, Beowulf and Jaws, The Epic of Gilgamesh and Little Red Riding Hood and the James Bond films such as Dr. No. These tales of conflict usually recount the hero’s ordeals, an escape from death, and end with a community or the world itself saved from evil. The psychological appeal of this plot is obvious and eternal.
4. Voyage and Return. Christopher Booker argues that stories as diverse as Alice
in Wonderland and H G Wells’ The Time Machine and Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner follow the same structure of personal development through leaving and returning home. Robinson Crusoe also comes to mind. The protagonist leaves every day experience to enter a strange and alien world, returning after what often amounts to a thrilling escape.
5. Quest. This could be the quest for a holy grail, a whale, or a kidnapped child. The quest plot links much popular fiction, featuring a hero, normally joined by friends, traveling the world and fighting to overcome evil and secure a priceless treasure, sometimes a girl. Obvious examples include Lord of the Rings, Moby Dick, The Odyssey and a thousand others.
6. Rags to Riches. These stories involve modest, generally virtuous but downtrodden characters, who achieve happiness or security when their special talent or true beauty is revealed. Includes any number of classic ‘dime’ novels. The riches in question can be literal or metaphoric. Better known examples include Cinderella, Pygmalion, The Ugly Duckling, and David Copperfield.
7. Rebirth. The central character finds a new reason for living , like Scrooge in A Christmas Carol. Frank Capra’s film, It’s a Wonderful Life, also has a ‘rebirth’ plot. Crime and Punishment, Snow White and Peer Gynt are further examples. All of these tales focus on a threatening shadow which is almost victorious until a sequence of fortuitous (or even miraculous) events lead to redemption and rebirth.
Table of contents for Learning To Write
- Learning to Write I
- Learning to Write II
- Learning to Write III
- Learning to Write IV
- Learning to Write V
- Learning to Write VI
- Learning to Write VII
- Learning to Write VIII
- Learning to Write IX
- Learning to Write X
- Learning to Write XI
- Learning to Write XII
- Learning to Write XIII
- Learning to Write XIV
- Learning to Write XV
- Learning to Write XVI
- Learning to Write XVII
- Learning to Write XVIII
- Learning to Write XIX
- Learning to Write XX
- Learning to Write XXI
- Learning to Write XXII
- Learning to Write XXIII
- Learning to Write XXIV
- Learning to Write XXV
- Learning to Write XXVI
- Learning to Write XXVII
- Learning to Write XXVIII
- Learning to Write XXIX
- Learning to Write XXX
- Learning to Write XXXI
- Fictional Character
- How Many Plots Are There?
- Making Metaphors
- Four Walls and One Passion
If you enjoyed this post, subscribe to my RSS feed