Friday, May 25, 2012

Putting Your Protagonist in Conflict

10 Ways to Put Your Protagonist/Hero into Conflict


You must put the protagonist(s) in conflict with either his or her own environment or the environment of others to keep the story moving and interesting.  A story without conflict is flat and boring and won't sell.

Do this by creating one or a combination of the following situations:

1. Something changes in the environment.

2. Moving the protagonist from one environment to another.

3. Put the protagonist in an environment that is in conflict with other environments.

4. Put the protagonist in an environment he or she wants to change.

5. Give the protagonist an environment to conquer.

6. Put him or her in an environment he or she wants to escape.

7. Put the protagonist in an environment where he or she is not wanted.

8. Put the protagonist in an environment for which he or she is unsuited.

9. Change the protagonist's status quo in his or her environment.

10. Change the status quo of the environment.

Give the protagonist a chief motivating force with a tangible object. His or her response to the environment yields a determination to do something about it (the chief motivating force) to achieve some tangible objective. It helps if you exaggerate the protagonist's reaction to the environment.

Write right and write on.

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