A Grand Argument is a type of conceptually complete story with both an emotional and logical comprehensiveness. There are a number of qualities which determine whether a story is a Grand Argument or not. These are seen in the story’s structure, dynamics, character, theme, plot, and genre. These parts of a Grand Argument Story combine in complex relationships to create its Storyform.
Structure
The underlying relationship between the parts of a story describe its structure. A Grand Argument Story has a very specific structure.
Dynamics
The moving, growing, or changing parts of a Grand Argument Story describe its dynamics.
Character
Grand Argument Stories deal with two types of Characters: Overall Story Characters and Subjective Characters. These Characters provide the audience with the experience of moving through the story in both a passionate and an intellectual sense.
Theme
In a Grand Argument Story, the theme is tied to every structural and dynamic element. It provides the various biases and perspectives necessary to convey the story’s subject matter or meaning.
Plot
This is the is the sequence in which a story’s thematic structure is explored. Plot details the order in which dramatic elements must occur within that story.
Genre
Genre in a Grand Argument Story classifies the audience’s experience of a story in the broadest sense. Genre takes into account the elements of structure, dynamics, character, plot, and theme to define significant differences between various complete Grand Argument Stories.
Storyform
A Storyform is like a blueprint which describes how these parts shall relate in a particular story, regardless of how they are symbolized for the audience. It is such a Storyform which allows such different stories as West Side Story and Romeo and Juliet, or Cyrano de Bergerac and Roxanne to share the same meaning while bearing little resemblance to each other. What these two pairs of stories share is virtually the same Storyform.