THE CHARACTER SKETCH
Descriptive Writing
When you write a character sketch, you are trying
to introduce the reader to someone. You want the reader to have a strong mental
image of the person, to know how the person talks, to know the person's
characteristic ways of doing things, to know something about the person's value
system. Character sketches only give snap shots of people; therefore, you
should not try to write a history of the person.
A good way to write a character sketch is to tell a little story about one encounter. If you do that, you could describe a place briefly, hopefully a place that belongs to the person you are describing, focusing on things in the scene that are somehow representative of the person you are describing. Describe how the person is dressed. or facial expressions. From time to time, describe the person's gestures to put words into the person's mouth in direct quotations.
As you work on this sketch, you should decide what kind of emotional reaction you want the reader to have in relationship to this person. What kind of details can you select to create that emotional reaction? Avoid making broad characterizing statements; instead, let the details you give suggest general characteristics. Let the reader draw her own conclusions
Example Sketch
Eudora Welty’s Sketch of Miss Duling
Miss Duling dressed as plainly as a
Pilgrim on a Thanksgiving poster we made in the schoolroom, in a longish
black-and-white checked gingham dress, a bright thick wool sweater the red of a
railroad lantern--she'd knitted it herself--black stockings and her narrow
elegant feet in black hightop shoes with heels you could hear coming,
rhythmical as a parade drum down the hall. Her silky black curly hair was drawn
back out of curl, fastened by high combs, and knotted behind. She carried her
spectacles on a gold chain hung around her neck. Her gaze was in general
sweeping, then suddenly at the point of concentration upon you. With a swing of
her bell that took her whole right arm and shoulder, she rang it, militant and
impartial, from the head of the front steps of Davis School
when it was time for us all to line up, girls on one side, boys on the other.
We were to march past her into the school building, while the fourth-grader she
nabbed played time on the piano, mostly to a tune we could have skipped to, but
we didn't skip into Davis
School .
Your Assignment
Write a character sketch. Avoid telling everything
about the person, instead, select two or three outstanding traits to illustrate
with incidents and examples. Use description to convey the impression. You may
find it helpful to follow the pattern of the model by beginning with an
incident showing the person performing a typical action. As you relate the
incident, or soon afterward, give vital information about the subject - name,
age, and occupation, for instance. Is it important that the reader see the
person? If so, give details of physical appearance. After finishing the sketch,
reread it to be sure that it creates a vivid impression, making any revisions
that you feel will make it more effective
Paper
Requirements:
Ø Typed
Size 12 Font, Standard Margins (1 inch all sides)
Ø 1 page
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