Jim Hull's Story Fanatic

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

clearing things up - Steadfast character

clearing things up - Steadfast character

July 10, 2005

Continuing exploration of problem-solving and justification. Here we clear up the Steadfast Main Character.

And now let’s clear things up for the Steadfast character…

Steadfast Wall 1Imagine you’re in a room that’s going to start filling up with water. It starts out very slow. So you put in a row of bricks and stand on it. But then, the room starts filling up faster. So you put up some more bricks and stand on top of those. But now the water is pouring in! So you keep building it and building it – your head just barely above the water line.

But it gets to a point where you can’t build it any higher. You’re standing on these four rows of bricks and there isn’t room for more. Either the pressure of the water is going to be so great that it will knock the whole thing down (Failure) or the water will seep over, and break one of the room wall’s down - relieving the room of pressure (Success). These are the stakes for a Steadfast character.

These two examples of Justification are different than talking about Acceleration - which is where you get into where it feels like for the character to build up or tear down their justifications. More on that in the next post.

Published on:
Written by:
Jim Hull
Preferred short link:
http://storyfanatic.com/st/1012
Filed under:
Story Theory
Topics covered:
steadfast main character

Further Reading

Enhance your understanding of story with these related articles.

Sign up for the Monthly Newsletter