Sagot :
Since this question requires a personal answer, the following is an example of an answer concerning one's struggles and the characters involved:
- External struggle: you want to attend a specific college and major at a specific area, but your parents do not want you to.
- Protagonist: yourself.
- Antagonists: your parents.
- Antihero: again yourself (the antihero is always the protagonist).
How can we define the characters?
- A protagonist is the leading character in a story, the one we, as an audience, will keep an eye on most of the time. We watch as the protagonist faces conflicts and we root for him or her.
- An antihero is a protagonist. The difference here is that the antihero is very flawed. Sometimes, we do not even like him or her, but he or she is still the main character in the story.
- The antagonists are the characters that oppose the protagonist. They are often perceived as being bad, although they are not necessarily so. They simply want the opposite of what the protagonist wants.
- With that in mind, in a story about your struggles, you would be the protagonist and antihero, and those who oppose you would be the antagonists.
- Remember that an external struggle is one that comes from the outside (other people, society, nature, etc.), whereas an internal struggle comes from the inside (your own feelings, for example).
Learn more about protagonists and antagonists here:
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