Jim Hull's Story Fanatic

This is Story Fanatic, a collection of articles covering story structure and analysis for
creative writers. Published weekly.

Acceleration

Acceleration

July 28, 2005

Continuing exploration of problem-solving and justification.

OK - so this was supposed to come after the last two posts that attempted to clarify Change Characters as Tearing Down a Wall of Justifications and Steadfast Characters as Building Up a Wall of Justifications.

How can a Change Character, who we’ve already established as someone who is “tearing down a wall” also be seen as someone building up a Justification?!

Because there is a difference between Justification and Acceleration.

For the rest of this post, let’s stick with the Change Character.

Justification is the wall - that is what is there. The Acceleration (or Growth) is how that wall is either torn down.

Whaddya mean?! Isn’t there just one way to tear down a wall?

Well, what if it’s one of these things where instead of starting at the top, the main character starts at the bottom?

He’ll pull a little bit off the bottom and let a little in. But then the pressure will build up, and he’ll have to pull some more off the bottom. It almost feels like he is trying to let stuff in.

When he starts at the top it will feel like he’s trying to break through the wall.

It’s almost like the difference between push or pull.

The one where you’re tearing down from the top is almost like you are being compelled to break through and push those pieces out. The one where you’re starting from the bottom, you’re clearing those pieces out in order to pull things in.

This sounds an awful lot like a Start Story. In a Start Story you need something - you constantly are pulling in what you need. And, of course, as you are pulling in, clearing those bricks from the bottom, you are tearing down that wall of Justification.

In a Stop Story you need to get rid of something - so you’re constantly pushing things out of the way - taking those bricks from the top and tossing them aside.

So how that wall is torn down is the nature of the Main Character’s Growth. It gets you to a point where you can recognize and see your true problem.

Published on:
Written by:
Jim Hull
Preferred short link:
http://storyfanatic.com/st/1017
Filed under:
Story Theory
Topics covered:

Further Reading

Enhance your understanding of story with these related articles.

    Previous

    Dramatica Simplified

    Dramatica can seem a bit overwhelming when you first start out. I remember flipping through the dictionary at the back of the theory book and thinking, “This is insane!” But after eight years of working with it, I’ve got the model pretty much memorized (at least down to the Variation level) and have a pretty good understanding of each of the terms.

    Dramatica Simplified

    Next

    Continuing exploration of problem-solving and justification.

    simply put
Sign up for the Monthly Newsletter