Hello everyone! Today we are finishing our breakdown of story structure, according to the positive steadfast, flat-arc protagonist--protagonists who don't change drastically in their worldviews (and instead usually inspire change in others).
Here are the previous posts in the series:
Debunking 6 Myths about Steadfast, Flat-arc Characters
Principles of the Steadfast, Flat-arc Protagonist
3 Categories of Steadfast, Flat-arc Characters
Just as a recap, there are three categories of positive steadfast protagonists.
1. One that experiences little to no doubt, such as James Barrie in Finding Neverland. (Because they experience no doubt, there isn't much of an internal journey plotline, so another type of plotline will be emphasized in its place--likely the world/society or the Influence Character plotline.)
2. One that doubts applying the truth (his or her accurate worldview) in one of these ways:
- Doesn't know how to actually do what he needs to do (i.e. We all believe no one should go hungry, but how do we actually solve world hunger?), such as Ashitaka in Princess Mononoke.
- Doubts his capabilities. Does he have what it takes to claim victory? Can he survive the costs? This is where Peter Parker is at in the beginning of Spider-man 2.
- Doubts her role or worthiness. Should she be the person taking this journey? This is what happens in Moana.
3. One that entertains doubt concerning the truth, the accurate worldview. Could the opposing worldview (the lie, the misbelief, the anti-theme) be the right one? Diana does this in Wonder Woman.
And just to have everything together on the same page for reference, here are the stories we have been dissecting as examples: