A
novel's primary purpose is to tell a story but people
make the story happen. In real life, each of us is entirely unique;
we are far too complex to understand or describe. In literature,
characters are abbreviated to what is necessary for the story. E. M.
Forster in his book Aspects
of the Novel
(1927) divides the characters we find in fiction into FLAT and ROUND.
FLAT
characters (also called humours, types, or caricatures) in their
purest form are constructed around a single idea or quality. If, for
example, in all dialogue and narration of a novel, all we learn about
George is that he hates his mother, then George is a flat character.
He might never actually utter the words “I hate you” to his
mother, but if in all his dialogue, action and thoughts he has no
existence outside that phrase, no private life like the rest of us,
no other pleasure other then hating his mother, then George is as
flat a character as he can be. In fact he is not a character but an
idea personified. Anything more we learn about George, his physical
description, his hobbies, his relationship with other people, etc,
work to make him more round.
Sometimes
a character seems complex but can be described in a single sentence
because he reminds us of a social stereotype or a character from
another book. For example, we may present a suave secret agent who
has a license to kill, likes women and successfully foils colourful
bad guys. James Bond in Ian Fleming's novels was a round character,
but if we present a character who strongly reminds us of James Bond,
then our character is flat. Literary characters like Philip Marlowe,
Scarlett O'Hara, Sherlock Holmes, etc as well as social stereotypes
are known as STOCK characters. Stock characters were first described
by Theophrastus in 320 BC who also lists thirty examples. Stock
characters are a key component of genre fiction and they are
undeniably flat.
Flat
characters can never surprise. They are shorthand. Because they are
easily remembered and recognized, in a good novel they form the
background. They can enhance the plot and other characters and add
humour. In a bad novel they may be the main characters. If all we
learn about the main characters can be described in a few sentences,
and they seem to lead no life outside of those sentences, then they
become thoroughly unconvincing and we lose interest. It's like
cutting off a person painted on the back of a theatre stage and
bringing it forward to centre stage. What was convincing as a
background, up front is two dimensional cardboard, flat and
unbelievable.
ROUND
characters are like real people, complex. They have an appearance, a
job and a place to stay. They are defined by their behaviour and
dialogue with the other characters (what we call “character
interaction”.) They have fortes, weaknesses and faults. The
circumstances in the novel may change them in a believable way, if
for example they learn from their mistakes to amend or extend their
faults (“character development”). Round characters consume pages
but they are a sound and necessary investment which always pays off
to make the story believable.
So
think about the main
characters
of the novel you are reading. If they never surprise you and don't
change, they are flat. If they don't convince you or they behave
randomly, they are flat pretending to be round. If they don't
interact in a way that defines them as persons and they are not
easily distinguishable they are weak. And if they are all of the
above then you are reading a bad novel.
In
a good novel all the main characters, and some of the more important
secondary ones have strong and distinguishing fortes and faults. They
are defined by their interaction with other characters or the
environment so that we begin to sympathize with them. They develop in
ways that affect us emotionally and they surprise us in a believable
way. We thus believe in them and as a result the novel is enjoyable
and memorable.
What
if you find however that all the characters are fully described even
though they have no bearing to the plot of the novel? In other words
what if the background characters are all round? (This would be the
equivalent of moving an entire theatre on location so that the
normally painted background becomes the real background.) Then you
are probably reading a good novel written in the last century by an
overindulging author. The round background characters will make the
story more convincing, but round characters need time to be developed
so we will most likely have a two thousand page book in which little
happens. This was fine two hundred years ago when people were
isolated by a long harsh winter (as in Russia or England) with little
to do and with a thirst for new acquaintances but it is boring in
today's fast moving world. Convincing round characters that are not
used in the story today appear as “gossip”. (See my article on
Jane Austen's Emma).
Has
a working family person time for War
and Peace
now?
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