Theory – Setting
Why is setting important?
Your story obviously isn’t just a place! You have created a really cool character to live in your imagined setting. So your characters have to interact and truly inhabit the setting.
What are the three types of setting that you should consider?
You might be in a room in a building right now, but what year is it? What country are you in? What planet are you on? Like with your character, you should know your setting really well! Even if it’s more than what you may need to know for the story.
Of course your short story can’t cover the whole world. It can only focus on one or two scenes/particular locations. So you REALLY need to know the exact time, location, context and atmosphere of your character’s surroundings within your story.
How to develop the setting.
Sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste. How do the characters feel about the setting?
“Then the doorbell begins to ring and the people come in. The house fills with the alien scent of cigarettes, which will still be there in the morning along with a few uneaten candies and salted nuts, and with bursts of laughter that get louder as time passes. I lie in my bed listening to the bursts of laughter. I feel isolated, left out. Also I don’t understand why this activity, these noises and smells, is called “bridge.” It is not like a bridge.”
Your setting has to visualized, realistic and believable. Try and focus on one setting within your story, so you can fully flesh out the weather, sounds, colours, atmosphere and emotion. You have to create a picture in words, a backdrop that your plot can work in. If you’re having trouble, remember the 5 senses when creating your setting: smell, sound, sight, touch, taste.
Describe the setting throughout the composition
How to prepare (Strategies)