Social:Denouement
Denouement (UK: /deɪˈnuːmɒ̃, dɪ-/, US: /ˌdeɪnuːˈmɒ̃/) is an element in the structure of a story, in which all plot lines typically come to a resolution, events are explained, etc. It usually follows the climax.[1] The term is borrowed from the French word dénouement (fr) derived from Old French desnouer, 'to untie', which is from Latin: nodus, 'knot'.[2]
In the terminology of classical drama the final resolution is traditionally called catastrophe.[3]
Various authors suggest different taxonomies of the story structure. In particular, it is common to include the "falling action" between the climax and the denouement (see "List of story structures"). A denouement may be followed by a conclusion and an epilogue, which may give a moral of the story, outline subsequent events ("lived happily ever after"), etc. Alternatively, Henry Albert Philips (1912) includes the denouement in the "conclusion".[4]
Short stories, with their economy of words, often do not need an elaborate denouement.[4]
Typically a denouement is at the end of the narrative, but it may also start the story, acting as a teaser. Usually a denouement follows the logic of the course of the events, but sometimes it may be unmotivated, what is called "deus ex machina", as in some ancient Greek tragedies of Sophocles or Euripides.[5]
Another common type of a denouement is a happy ending.
References
- ↑ "dénouement". Cambridge Dictionary.
- ↑ denouement, etymonline
- ↑ "Catastrophe". In Ephraim Chambers, Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences, 1728
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Henry Albert Philips, The Plot of the Short Story: An Exhaustive Study, Both Synthetical and ..., 1912 p. 62
- ↑ Литературная энциклопедия терминов и понятий, 2001, (available in pdf format), p. 845 (in Russian)
