Objective and Subjective Characters
The reason there are two kinds of characters goes back to the concept of the
Story Mind. We have two principal views of that mind: the Objective view from
the outside looking in, and the Subjective view from the inside looking out. In
terms of the Story Mind, the Objective view is like looking at another person,
watching his thought processes at work. For an audience experiencing a story,
the Objective view is like watching a football game from the stands. All the
characters are most easily identified by their functions on the field.
The Subjective view is as if the Story Mind were our own. From this
perspective, only two characters are visible: Main and Obstacle. The Main and Obstacle
Characters represent the inner conflict of the Story Mind. In fact, we might
say a story is of two minds. In real life, we often play our own devil’s advocate, entertaining an alternative view as a means of arriving at the
best decision. Similarly, the Story Mind’s alternative views are made tangible through the Main and Obstacle
Characters. To the audience of a story, the Main Character experience is as if the
audience was actually one of the players on the field. The Obstacle Character is
the player who blocks the way.
To summarize then, characters come in two varieties: Objective and Subjective.
Objective Characters represent dramatic functions; Subjective Characters
represent points of view. When the Main Character point of view is attached to the
Protagonist function, the resulting character is commonly thought of as a hero.
Looking Forward
In the next chapter we will begin an in-depth exploration of Objective
Characters. Here we will meet the Protagonist, Antagonist, and several other
archetypes. Next we will dissect each archetype to see what essential dramatic
elements it contains. Finally, we will examine how those same elements can be
combined in different, non-archetypal patterns to create more realistic and versatile complex characters.
Then we will turn our attention to the Subjective Characters: Main and
Obstacle. We will examine how the audience point of view is shifted through the Main
Character’s growth. We will also explore the forces that drive these two characters and
forge the belief systems they posses.