[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Chapter 19 Epiphany Scenes

Working our way through Make a Scene by Jordan Rosenfeld. In the depths of part three, scene types, having looked at first scenes, suspense scenes, dramatic scenes, contemplative scenes, dialogue scenes, action scenes, and flashback scenes, it's now time for an epiphany.

"An epiphany is a moment when awareness or a sharp insight dawns suddenly on your protagonist as a result of events and interactions that have driven him to this moment."

I think of this as the realization. The character suddenly realizes something. This may have a cost to it -- sudden change hurts. They can also be positive turning points, though, when in the midst of despair and darkness, the character sees a ray of hope. Epiphanies are great opportunities for characters to transform themselves.

The epiphany:
  • has a cost or renews the character or both
  • epiphanies should be driven by plot events and information, not completely unexpected
  • the protagonist should gain surprising new insight or break through their own resistance and denial
  • epiphanies usually force the protagonist to make choices or changes
Drama, suspense, and sometimes contemplative scenes often lead to epiphanies. Don't overdo them -- people don't have insights every time they turn around.

Rosenfeld suggests the following types of epiphanies. For each one you need to know and show your readers who the character is before the epiphany, what leads them to the change, and what kind of a change happens.
  • Removing the Blinders: a character decides to learn what the truth is.
  • Realizing a Suppressed Desire: a character makes a major change in their life.
  • Accepting Limitations of Oneself or Another: realizing that some things can't be changed
  • Claiming Identity: accepting something essential about oneself
  • Rude Awakenings: circumstances or people force a character to change the
Opening the epiphany. The key to opening an epiphany is to quickly show the character in conflict, under pressure, unstable. The reader should know as quickly as possible and that change is coming. Epiphany openings often show:
  • the protagonist afraid or anxious about the future
  • the protagonist under pressure or stress
  • the protagonist taking unusual actions or behaving oddly
  • the protagonist expressing feelings of conflict about a given event or relationship
  • symbolic details of setting or images that hint at an epiphany to come
Pushing the character into epiphany. Once you start the scene, you need to raise the stakes so that the character realizes that important point. Stress, pressure, tension -- you need to push the character into realization. Some common methods of leverage include:
  • threat of loss: motivation for awareness -- open your eyes before it's too late
  • incontrovertible evidence: hard evidence can sometimes make people pay attention
  • injury to a loved one: I did that?
  • danger: death or bodily harm can make people face the truth
The moment of epiphany normally belongs right near the end of the scene. Let the character and the reader have a moment to think about what just happened. There are going to be emotional consequences, choices to be made, and debts to pay -- but you can do that in the next scene or scenes. You don't have to do it immediately, and there are advantages to pausing.

Rosenfeld's checklist for epiphany scenes:
  1. does the epiphany cause the protagonist to change?
  2. does the scene start with the character anxious about the future or under stress?
  3. does the scene put pressure and up the ante for the protagonist to make the realization?
  4. does the scene end soon after the epiphany, leaving the readers enough to chew on?
  5. does the epiphany change the protagonist's outlook and direction in ways that are demonstrated in future scenes?

Two more kinds of scenes ahead, climactic scenes and the final scene. And then there are a few other scene considerations.

So that's Rosenfeld talking about scenes where the character has a major realization -- an epiphany.

An assignment? I think perhaps the first part is to take a novel or story that you like and look for a scene with an epiphany. These are often the turning point scenes, where a character understands just what they have been doing to themselves and others. It is easy to let these scenes slip into melodramatic interior monologues, drenched in pathos. But you want to find a good epiphany scene, one that you like, and then take it apart. How did the writer lay the foundations at the beginning of the scene? How did they put the pressure on the character in the scene that leads up to them finally understanding? How do they portray that moment of insight, that realization that the only person responsible for all of their problems is themselves? And what happens to close out the scene?

The second part is to put together an epiphany scene for your own writing. What does the character need to learn? How will the character break through their own lack of understanding and resistance and take that look? Now, structure the whole scene, from the initial moments of uneasiness through the growing pressures to the moment of understanding, when the world suddenly becomes clear.

Write?
write!
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting: Sat, 5 Feb 1994 18:35:01 JST

FAQ: The Writer's Secret

The Mohair Rashly lecture on writing? Yes, you have come to the right place. Please go write.

I'm sorry, that was just a little joke. Now, if you will take a seat, the Mohair will explain the secret of writing.

The Writer's Secret

[the house lights dim slowly, then flash to full bright, then flick off. strange curly wiggles of light and pinwheels of color dazzle your eyes. a strange unearthly sound begins somewhere in the glowing darkness. the seat seems to be pushing up and gripping you in a warm familiar way.]

<actually, one of the stagehands is whistling behind the curtain with no sense of melody or tune, but we'll take whatever atmospheric effects we can get>

[the lights rise on stage, revealing a strange little man draped in white cloth staring at his bare feet poking out of the cloth in front of him. after a moment, he looks up and smiles.]

I wonder where I left my socks tonight? I thought I had them on, but it was so dark behind the stage. I must have lost them when I wasn't walking.

<someone in the audience coughs>

Oh! Hello. I almost forgot, you are all here to find the secret of writing, aren't you? If you are looking for the meaning of life lecture, that's down the hall in the padded room.

<a few people mutter and get up, rushing to the other lecture.>

So you are all in the right place now. Good, good.

Let me tell you about yourself. You have searched long and hard, pondering and paying for conferences and workshops and books. Perhaps you have even bought some of my books. If not, please see me after the lecture and I'll tell you where to get them.

But tonight you have come to the place where you will learn the real secret of writing.

You see, once I was like you. I tried exercises, I thought about famous schools that would let me take a test to decide if I could pay for lessons, I read, I complained bitterly that I had a good job and happy life which made it impossible for me to suffer enough to write, I even worried about which paper to write on and all that.

Then, one day, I learned the secret. And now I will tell it to you.

Are you ready?

Of course you are! So let us start.

First I want you to reach around with both hands as if you were going to scratch the back of your head. Yes, do it now.

Now lift the hair on the back of your head. Go ahead and scratch a little if you want to.

Feels good, doesn't it?

Okay, while you have the hair up, I want you to stretch your mind back, to reach back with your nerves and will. Feel the back of your head - from the inside. Let yourself focus on the back of your head.

Now. Open the eye of the writer, hidden in the back of your head!

Did you feel it quiver? Just a little?

You see, the secret of the writer is this third eye, waiting for you to learn to open it. It is not easy. You have all that hair, and the muscles in the back of your head aren't used to opening that sleeping eye, but you can do it. I know you can.

Just stretch, then relax, and try again. Feel the muscles, feel the hidden bulge in the back of your mind, and try to lift those eyelashes you can't see.

If you get the eye of the writer open, even the tiniest little crack, don't be surprised or scared when it shows you something quite different than you have ever seen before. After all, you've never tried to look through the back of your head before, have you?

Once you get even a little glimpse through that eye, you will write. And then take another glance, or even a glare, through that eye and keep writing. What you see through that third eye may startle and shock you, but as long as you keep looking through it, the sights will rush into the back of your mind, bounce around inside, and then come streaming out. Don't stop that flow - keep writing as long as you have the third eye open.

Sometimes you may want to rest the poor aching eyelid in the back of your head, or it may even drop down by itself, blinking as the scene changes, or dazzled by the lights. That's okay - take some time to let your regular eyes see the writing you've done, and squint a bit to get the writing in good shape.

Polish up some of that writing and put it in the mail, because what you have seen with your third eye is never boring, and editors everywhere are waiting to hear about the mystic sightings. Really. In fact, if you do this regularly, they will send you paper marked with our secret mark - look at the pyramid and you will see it.

That's really all there is to it. That is the secret of the writer - opening the third eye hiding in the back of your head and taking a look around the places it shows you. That isn't so hard, is it?

So, right now, before you forget, try again - let your mind reach back, and feel that eyelid rise slowly, just a crack, and the eye in the back of your head foggily focuses on...

What did you see?

Incidentally, what color is your third eye? I can't quite tell from here...

Keep that eye open whenever you can, and you'll learn to see flea circuses dancing on the high wires of spider webs, miles and miles across vast desserts (burp!), and other strange and wonderful places.

Take a moment or two to let your friends on WRITERS know what you see with your third eye - and let people in on the secret of the writer.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Chapter 19 Epiphany Scenes

Working our way through Make a Scene by Jordan Rosenfeld. In the depths of part three, scene types, having looked at first scenes, suspense scenes, dramatic scenes, contemplative scenes, dialogue scenes, action scenes, and flashback scenes, it's now time for an epiphany.

"An epiphany is a moment when awareness or a sharp insight dawns suddenly on your protagonist as a result of events and interactions that have driven him to this moment."

I think of this as the realization. The character suddenly realizes something. This may have a cost to it -- sudden change hurts. They can also be positive turning points, though, when in the midst of despair and darkness, the character sees a ray of hope. Epiphanies are great opportunities for characters to transform themselves.

The epiphany:
  • has a cost or renews the character or both
  • epiphanies should be driven by plot events and information, not completely unexpected
  • the protagonist should gain surprising new insight or break through their own resistance and denial
  • epiphanies usually force the protagonist to make choices or changes
Drama, suspense, and sometimes contemplative scenes often lead to epiphanies. Don't overdo them -- people don't have insights every time they turn around.

Rosenfeld suggests the following types of epiphanies. For each one you need to know and show your readers who the character is before the epiphany, what leads them to the change, and what kind of a change happens.
  • Removing the Blinders: a character decides to learn what the truth is.
  • Realizing a Suppressed Desire: a character makes a major change in their life.
  • Accepting Limitations of Oneself or Another: realizing that some things can't be changed
  • Claiming Identity: accepting something essential about oneself
  • Rude Awakenings: circumstances or people force a character to change the
Opening the epiphany. The key to opening an epiphany is to quickly show the character in conflict, under pressure, unstable. The reader should know as quickly as possible and that change is coming. Epiphany openings often show:
  • the protagonist afraid or anxious about the future
  • the protagonist under pressure or stress
  • the protagonist taking unusual actions or behaving oddly
  • the protagonist expressing feelings of conflict about a given event or relationship
  • symbolic details of setting or images that hint at an epiphany to come
Pushing the character into epiphany. Once you start the scene, you need to raise the stakes so that the character realizes that important point. Stress, pressure, tension -- you need to push the character into realization. Some common methods of leverage include:
  • threat of loss: motivation for awareness -- open your eyes before it's too late
  • incontrovertible evidence: hard evidence can sometimes make people pay attention
  • injury to a loved one: I did that?
  • danger: death or bodily harm can make people face the truth
The moment of epiphany normally belongs right near the end of the scene. Let the character and the reader have a moment to think about what just happened. There are going to be emotional consequences, choices to be made, and debts to pay -- but you can do that in the next scene or scenes. You don't have to do it immediately, and there are advantages to pausing.

Rosenfeld's checklist for epiphany scenes:
  • does the epiphany cause the protagonist to change?
  • does the scene start with the character anxious about the future or under stress?
  • does the scene put pressure and up the ante for the protagonist to make the realization?
  • does the scene end soon after the epiphany, leaving the readers enough to chew on?
  • does the epiphany change the protagonist's outlook and direction in ways that are demonstrated in future scenes?
Two more kinds of scenes ahead, climactic scenes and the final scene. And then there are a few other scene considerations.

So that's Rosenfeld talking about scenes where the character has a major realization -- an epiphany.

An assignment? I think perhaps the first part is to take a novel or story that you like and look for a scene with an epiphany. These are often the turning point scenes, where a character understands just what they have been doing to themselves and others. It is easy to let these scenes slip into melodramatic interior monologues, drenched in pathos. But you want to find a good epiphany scene, one that you like, and then take it apart. How did the writer lay the foundations at the beginning of the scene? How did they put the pressure on the character in the scene that leads up to them finally understanding? How do they portray that moment of insight, that realization that the only person responsible for all of their problems is themselves? And what happens to close out the scene?

The second part is to put together an epiphany scene for your own writing. What does the character need to learn? How will the character break through their own lack of understanding and resistance and take that look? Now, structure the whole scene, from the initial moments of uneasiness through the growing pressures to the moment of understanding, when the world suddenly becomes clear.

Write?
write!

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