CHARACTER TYPES Sixth Grade ELA Teachers INTRODUCTION  This lesson is about the different types of characters found in literature.  The different types I will cover in this.

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Transcript CHARACTER TYPES Sixth Grade ELA Teachers INTRODUCTION  This lesson is about the different types of characters found in literature.  The different types I will cover in this.

CHARACTER
TYPES
Sixth Grade
ELA Teachers
INTRODUCTION
 This
lesson is about the different
types of characters found in
literature.
 The different types I will cover in
this lesson are the protagonist and
antagonist.
 I will explain what each of these
entail so that you can identify types
of characters in stories that you
read.
PROTAGONIST/ANTAGONIST
It
is easiest to
think of the
protagonist and
antagonist
characters as the
"good guy" and
the "bad guy"
respectively.
HERO AND VILLAIN
 In
order to
understand
protagonist and
antagonist, you
can think of the
protagonist as
the hero and the
antagonist as
the villain.
HOW TO REMEMBER
Pro
Ant
 The
 The
prefix pro
means good, or
positive.
prefix ant
means bad, or
negative.
PROTAGONIST
 Central
character
of story
 Can be male or
female
 Written as being
"good" most of the
time, but in some
instances can be
"bad."
 Story usually told
from protagonists
point of view.
ANTAGONIST





Causes or leads the
conflict against the
protagonist
Not always human, but
can be a group or force
as well.
Mirrors protagonist
Whatever the
protagonist does that is
good, the antagonist will
work to undo.
Usually the antagonist
attempts to disguise
him/her/itself.
EXAMPLE



Consider the story The
Three Little Pigs.
In the original story, the
three pigs are the
protagonists and the
wolf is the antagonist.
A new book titled The
Real Story of The Three
Little Pigs is written in
the wolf's point of view
and he becomes the
protagonist and the pigs
are the antagonists.
PROTAGONIST/ANTAGONIST
Completely
different and in most
cases, complete opposites
Can
Just
both be very complex
because the protagonist is the
central character in the story does
not mean that he/she/it is any more
complex than the antagonist.
HOW TO IDENTIFY
 Think
about which character is central to
the story. (protagonist)
 Think about which character (or what
force) is acting against that central
character (antagonist).
 Usually you can consider which character
is good and which is bad.
 In most instances, the good character is
the protagonist and the bad, or opposing
character, is the antagonist.