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Understanding Naturalism in Fiction

Naturalism depicts reality in its most brutal form, focusing on how characters lack free will and are trapped by forces outside their control like heredity and environment. Writers take an objective, scientific approach, simply recording events without judgment so readers draw their own conclusions. Characters often resort to basic instincts and desperate behaviors to survive in dull, unheroic settings representing the harshness of ordinary life.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
446 views1 page

Understanding Naturalism in Fiction

Naturalism depicts reality in its most brutal form, focusing on how characters lack free will and are trapped by forces outside their control like heredity and environment. Writers take an objective, scientific approach, simply recording events without judgment so readers draw their own conclusions. Characters often resort to basic instincts and desperate behaviors to survive in dull, unheroic settings representing the harshness of ordinary life.

Uploaded by

Janett Monsanto
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CHARACTERISTICS (tenets) OF NATURALISM (Naturalistic Fiction)

In what ways is Naturalism different than Realism?

1. Naturalism is sometimes seen as an extreme form of Realism—reality in its most brutal form.

2. Naturalist fiction tends to be an objective, almost scientific presentation of a situation.


 The writer is simply a recorder of what happens without much judgment or interpretation.
 Readers become “witnesses” to these events, left mostly to draw their own conclusions and form
their own opinions.

3. Naturalist fiction deals with situations and settings that take away the free will of the characters.
Even though they may want things to be different, characters in Naturalist fiction do not seem to have
any choices about their own lives--they are trapped by social, economic, emotional, hereditary or
environmental forces.

4. It resembles Darwin’s “survival of the fittest” (natural selection) theory—the strong and fortunate
survive and thrive; the weak become victims of their environments and circumstances.

5. Characters often must resort to basic human instinct and desperate or degrading behaviors and
situations in order to survive.

6. The setting (social and cultural surroundings and landscapes) are commonplace and un-heroic; life
for the characters is made up of dull routines of daily existence in order to make a life in harsh
surroundings.

7. Naturalist characters usually exhibit one “fatal flaw”—a character flaw that affects the
character’s decisions and actions and usually leads to negative consequences. Hubris (exaggerated
pride, self-confidence and/or arrogance) is sometimes that fatal flaw, but it can be something else, as
well.

8. The controlling forces are society and the surrounding environment.

9. Characters’ lives are conditioned and controlled by their environments, their family situations,
heredity, chance, or instinct, yet they fight to hold on to their lives, self worth and individuality.
Characters in Naturalistic fiction possess qualities that make them seem heroic in their struggles to
maintain their dignity and to survive in unforgiving or dehumanizing environments or situations. In true
Naturalist characters, readers should be able to identify qualities that make the characters worthy
of respect in some way.

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