Read Storytelling for Lawyers Online
Authors: Philip Meyer
irony in,
27
melodrama in,
20
Moby Dick
and,
21
motivation in,
41
Roemer on,
21
sequence of events in,
24
steady state in,
23
trouble in,
23
pacing and,
197
judges
characters and,
74
Donovan and,
103
sentences by,
74
jury
Bruner on,
40
characters and,
74
dialogic relationship with,
52
,
58
â
59
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
32
â
33
,
51
,
55
â
59
story and,
6
Kane, Amy (fictional character), in
High Noon
,
21
,
77
,
80
â
81
Kane, Will (fictional character), in
High Noon
Failla and,
110
Kerr-McGee.
See The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
King, Rodney,
127
law school examinations, grading,
115
â
17
Lawyering Theory Colloquium,
202
â
4
“Lay Lady Lay” (Dylan),
159
legal rules, theme and,
17
Lenny (fictional character), in
Of Mice and Men
,
135
Lewis, John L.,
102
liability.
See
strict liability
lifelikeness.
See
verisimilitude
on characters,
72
on description,
155
on perspective,
140
on rhythm,
119
on summary,
127
logic.
See
narrative logic
loyalty, in
High Noon
,
22
Mafia.
See
Failla, Louis “Louie”
Mahony, Edmund,
103
Mailer, Norman,
119
,
141
,
142
â
43
,
147
â
48
pacing by,
197
The Maltese Falcon
(movie),
71
markers, for steady state,
38
Marvel Comics,
20
McKee, Robert,
66
meaning
in
High Noon
,
22
of ministory,
146
narrative logic with,
14
in plot,
13
Mehring, Margaret,
80
on characters,
112
antagonism in,
20
betrayal in,
26
Brooks on,
68
ending of,
64
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
28
â
68
good and evil in,
19
in
Jaws
,
20
past-tense story of,
54
premature ending in,
24
Roemer on,
19
mental retardation,
134
Miller, Frank (fictional character), in
High Noon
,
23
,
25
â
26
,
79
â
82
setting for,
156
Minding the Law
(Amsterdam and Bruner),
203
ministory
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
33
â
35
meaning of,
146
Moby Dick
,
21
Morales, Tito,
91
,
93
,
102
,
103
,
104
â
6
,
113
,
150
morals, by Aesop,
13
motivation
causality and,
74
of characters,
74
Donovan and,
95
in
Jaws
,
41
in movies,
112
in novels,
74
movie directors,
6
for
High Noon
,
21
movies.
See also specific movies
buddy pictures,
99
characterization in,
80
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
and,
29
â
30
motivation in,
112
perspective in,
138
plot in,
70
sequence in,
12
mud springs, analogies of,
34
â
35
,
52
My Dark Places
(Ellroy),
119
,
120
â
23
,
121
f
,
143
third-person objective perspective in,
140
myth, in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
29
â
30
,
68
with meaning,
14
sequence of events and,
194
of story,
141
narrative profluence
beginning and,
11
narrative theme.
See
theme
framing story and,
201
sequence of events and,
186
“Narrative Time” (Ricoeur),
8
“The Nature of Anthropological Understanding” (Geertz),
69
Norton, Ed (fictional character),
93
,
98
novels
characters in,
72
motivation in,
74
plot trajectory of,
8
Oates, Joyce Carol,
155
Of Mice and Men
(Steinbeck),
135
omniscient perspective,
142
â
43
believability of,
152
detachment with,
148
On Directing Film
(Mamet),
8
opening
by Donovan,
94
Failla and,
94
plot trajectory and,
8
pacing
paratexts,
6
past-tense story,
6
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
29
,
54
of melodrama,
54
“Pentad,”
4
perlocutionary act,
30
personal disposition,
73
perspective,
5
to control flow of information,
141
â
42
Lodge on,
140
in movies,
138
third-person objective,
140
third-person subjective,
139
Pilgrim, Billy (fictional character), in
Slaughterhouse Five
,
187
â
200
audience and,
12
Brooks on,
12
characters and,
70
in closing argument in torts case,
28
â
68
definition of,
11
description for,
156
disillusionment,
61
environment for,
156
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
29
,
64
in movies,
70
narrative profluence in,
11
â
12
,
64
setting for,
156
themes and,
16
voice and,
118
struggle toward,
113
plot trajectory
of novels,
8
opening and,
8
point of view.
See
perspective
Poo-tee-wee,
199
popular culture,
6
Porter, Katherine Anne,
84
post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy,
189
â
90
premature ending, in melodrama,
24
present-tense voice,
6
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
29
,
38
â
39
,
52
Prince, Gerald,
189
â
90
,
195
,
198
â
99
proem,
32
in
The Estate of Karen Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee
,
58
â
59
profluence.
See
narrative profluence
progressive complications
of antagonist,
24