Совет 09 мая 05:31

Master Dialogue to Reveal Character and Advance Plot

Dialogue serves multiple purposes: revealing character voice, advancing plot, building tension, and creating intimacy between characters and readers. Effective dialogue sounds natural while remaining purposeful and economical.

Dialogue is often the most revealing element of characterization and one of the most difficult techniques to master. Each character should have a distinctive voice—not through artificial speech patterns but through word choice, sentence length, rhythm, and what they choose to discuss or avoid. Chekhov understood that what characters don't say is as important as what they do say. Subtext—the unspoken tension beneath dialogue—creates dramatic power. In Anna Karenina, Tolstoy uses dialogue to reveal the vast differences between characters' inner worlds even when discussing mundane topics. Effective dialogue avoids exposition—characters shouldn't explain information primarily for the reader's benefit. Instead, they should speak naturally while pursuing goals and navigating relationships. Each line should reveal something about who the character is, what they want, or advance the plot toward its inevitable conclusion. Reading dialogue aloud is essential—bad dialogue sounds awkward and forced when spoken, while good dialogue flows naturally despite being carefully constructed. Remove filler words and pleasantries that don't serve characterization. Let silences and interruptions carry meaning. Create conflict within conversations where characters want different things and misunderstand each other. This generates authentic tension that propels both character development and plot forward simultaneously.

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"Слово за словом за словом — это сила." — Маргарет Этвуд