Adelphiasoplot

Nine Plots in Casablanca: Georg Polti Plots or Storylines - The 36 Dramatic or Tragic Situations

Abstract

Yet people have long thought that there are only seven basic dramatic plots. Perhaps Gerard de Nerval began the idea of seven by associating each of the seven capital sins with a plot. He tried to categorise dramatic situations based on the deadly sins but was obliged to eliminate two from the start, gluttony and sloth, as being hardly the stuff of drama, and nearly had to lose lust. If you have been intending to start that novel or screenplay but felt short of ideas, here is the Wise Women's synopsis of plot to give you a few ideas. May the Goddess inspire you. Saviour Shirlie.
Page Tags: Nine, Plots, Casablanca, Drama, 36 Dramatic Situations, Georg Polti, Gozzi, Plot, Plots, Storylines, Narrative
Site Tags: tarot God’s Truth Hellenization crucifixion svg art Site A-Z Joshua Conjectures The Star Israelites Deuteronomic history argue Truth CGText dhtml art Jesus Essene
Loading
Excessive confidence is a key characteristic of experts.
Who Lies Sleeping?

Wise Women Discuss—Plot!

 
 

Nine Plots in Casablanca

How many plots can be discerned in dramatic fiction? Aristotle merely distinguished simple and complex tragedies:

Slightly more complex is the idea of three types of dramas: someone struggling with nature, someone struggling with someone else, and someone struggling with their own personality.

Yet people have long thought that there are only seven basic dramatic plots. Perhaps Gerard de Nerval began the idea of seven by associating each of the seven capital sins with a plot. He tried to categorise dramatic situations based on the deadly sins but was obliged to eliminate two from the start, gluttony and sloth, as being hardly the stuff of drama, and nearly had to lose lust.

Nevertheless the rumour that there were very few different plots in the world persisted. Rory Johnston has claimed in the London Guardian that his father, the Irish playwright, Denis Johnston, detected just eight dramatic plots. They can appear as tragedy, comedy, farce,and be inverted but always form the basis of all captivating writing.

A fascinating rejoinder, by Robert Blake, later showed that all of Denis Johnston's plots and one more could be seen in the film, Casablanca. So the mysterious seven plots expanded to eight then nine and finally condensed to one!

Blake's nine plots of Casablanca are:

  1. Cinderella

    Unrecognised virtue at last recognised; the hero doesn't have to be a girl, it does not have to be a love story—the Tortoise and the Hare is the same plot. The essence is that Good is despised but recognised in the end—something we all want to believe. In Casablanca, Rick, the expatriot bar owner in Morocco, is a drunken cynic, but in the end his goodness emerges.
  2. Achilles

    The fatal flaw; the basis of all classical tragedy, though it can also be comic, as in many farces. In Casablanca, Rick is the fatally flawed hero who spends much of the drama sulking, but is forced into selfless action by Elsa, the woman he loves.
  3. Faust

    The debt that must be paid, the fate that catches up with us sooner or later. In Casablanca, Rick has everything but the woman he loves, but he loses it all for her sake.
  4. Tristan

    The standard triangular plot of two women and a man or two men and a woman. In Casablanca, heroic Rick (Tristan) loves Elsa (Isolde) but she is already married to solid but unexciting Victor Lazlo (King Mark).
  5. Circe

    The spider and the fly; Othello, and The Barretts of Wimpole Street. In Casablanca, Elsa's wiles lure Rick into helping her only to destroy him.
  6. Romeo and Juliet

    Boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy either finds or does not find girl—it does not matter which. In Casablanca, Rick had loved Elsa in Paris but had lost her; in Morocco, they are reunited but are parted again.
  7. Orpheus

    The gift that is taken away. The action may be based on the tragedy of the loss itself as in Juno and the Paycock, or based on the search following the loss as in Jason and the Golden Fleece. In Casablanca, the gift is both concrete and abstract. A letter of transit allowing Rick to return to the USA is given to Lazlo. Rick's personal happiness is also given up to save the world for democracy.
  8. The Irrepressible Hero

    As in Harvey filmed with James Stewart. In Casablanca, Rick is the hero who cannot be kept down.
  9. The Wandering Jew

    Robert Blake, whose observations on Casablanca these are, notes that there is a ninth type, the Wandering Jew (Rick), the persecuted traveller who will never return home.

Thus there is only one plot not nine—Casablanca!



Last uploaded: 20 December, 2010.

Short Responses and Suggestions

* Required.  No spam




New. No comments posted here yet. Be the first one!

Other Websites or Blogs

Before you go, think about this…

Polls show that something like half of American adults do not know that the Earth goes round the sun and takes a year to do it. Sixty three per cent of American adults are unaware that the last dinosaur died before the first human arose. 75 per cent do not know that antibiotics kill bacteria but not viruses. 57 per cent do not know that electrons are smaller than atoms.
Carl Sagan, The Demon Haunted World (1996)

Support Us!
Buy a Book

Support independent publishers and writers snubbed by big retailers.
Ask your public library to order these books.
Available through all good bookshops

Get them cheaper
Direct Order Form
Get them cheaper


© All rights reserved

Who Lies Sleeping?

Who Lies Sleeping?
The Dinosaur Heritage and the Extinction of Man
ISBN 0-9521913-0-X £7.99

The Mystery of Barabbas

The Mystery of Barabbas.
Exploring the Origins of a Pagan Religion
ISBN 0-9521913-1-8 £9.99

The Hidden Jesus

The Hidden Jesus.
The Secret Testament Revealed
ISBN 0-9521913-2-6 £12.99

These pages are for use!

Creative Commons License
This work by Dr M D Magee is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.askwhy.co.uk/.

This material may be freely used except to make a profit by it! Articles on this website are published and © Mike Magee and AskWhy! Publications except where otherwise attributed. Copyright can be transferred only in writing: Library of Congress: Copyright Basics.

Conditions

Permission to copy for personal use is granted. Teachers and small group facilitators may also make copies for their students and group members, providing that attribution is properly given. When quoting, suggested attribution format:

Author, AskWhy! Publications Website, “Page Title”, Updated: day, month, year, www .askwhy .co .uk / subdomains / page .php

Adding the date accessed also will help future searches when the website no longer exists and has to be accessed from archives… for example…

Dr M D Magee, AskWhy! Publications Website, “Sun Gods as Atoning Saviours” Updated: Monday, May 07, 2001, www.askwhy .co .uk / christianity / 0310sungod .php (accessed 5 August, 2007)

Electronic websites please link to us at http://www.askwhy.co.uk or to major contents pages, if preferred, but we might remove or rename individual pages. Pages may be redisplayed on the web as long as the original source is clear. For commercial permissions apply to AskWhy! Publications.

All rights reserved.

AskWhy! Blogger

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Add Feed to Google

Website Summary