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- Organization: Arizona State University
- Date: Friday, 20 Nov 1992 09:07:56 MST
- From: Jon L. Campbell <KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET>
- Message-ID: <92325.090756KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET>
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: What is an antagonist?
- Lines: 67
-
- Fred Weldon writes that a story doesn't necessarily need an antagonist.
-
- I suppose that this is true, but ask: What really is an antagonist?
-
- Does antagonist mean it is:
-
- - someone who opposes the protagonist?
- - someone other than the protagonist?
- - or could be the same as the protagonist?
- - someone who stirs up conflict in a story?
- - or something that stirs up conflict in a story?
- - a noun?
-
- Let us talk about those stories that proported to have been written
- without a clearly identifiable antagonist. Can anyone think of such a
- story? Think about the story that comes to mind, let the protagonist
- talk to you about the problem they encounter in the story. Imagine
- that the protagonist (he) tells you that he has a drinking problem and
- can't stop. No matter how hard he tries, he can't seem to give it up.
- Day after day he struggles with his problem, until finally he loses his
- job because he was caught drinking on the job. The job, no matter how
- boring was his whole life. He lived from the job, cared deeply about
- what he did, and took solice with his miserable existence because he
- had a job too go to every day.
- Now, he doesn't have a reason to get up in the morning and spends
- his morning in his shorts drinking cheap booze. The days become longer.
- The televsion can't replace what he had at work and booze only prolongs
- the angony.
-
- Fairly boring plot so far, but has anyone identified the antagonist?
- Even if the story progressed to the point that he returns to work without
- permission and gets into a conflict with his boss, the antagonist isn't
- necessarily his boss. Then who or what is the antagonist? > Booze?
-
- I don't know if booze could be called the antagonist, but unless the
- story has no conflict or element of conflict then shouldn't there be an
- antagonist somewhere? If the word antagonist is a noun, then woudn't it
- be reasonable to suggest that every instigator of a conflict is an
- antagonist in disguise?
-
- Like I said before, Imagine a story where you believe there isn't
- a clearly identifiable antagonist and apply a simple test. Look for the
- conflict, if there is one, and pick out the instigator in the conflict.
- That person, place, or thing may be the antagonist in disguise, but
- could be cleverly hidden. Even in a story where there is a serial
- killer as the central character there could be a hidden antagonist
- lurking in the shadows. Say that the serial killer (she this time) is
- the protagonist and we follow her development in the story. From the
- first murder through reconciliation (resolution/denouncement) with her
- inner self. We follow her as she denounces her actions and seeks to find
- a way to end her abusive behavior. She recognizes that what she does is
- wrong and must find a way to stop. If this story is a clearly identified
- path of causual events that lead to a climaxtic closure as I suppose most
- stories do, then would it not be reasonable to suggest that her victims
- are the antagonists? Even in a story where we treat the killer with such
- sympathy and agree that the actions of the killer were warranted from their
- point of view, wouldn't the victims then become the antagonist?
-
- I don't know the answer to this questions, but maybe some of you out
- there do.
-
-
- Keep thinking of better ways to think makes me want to think about
- what it takes to think of better ways to think . . . I think.
-
-
- Jon
-