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When & How to Create an Antagonist

How to Create an Antagonist

There are many ways to put your antagonist in the way of the protagonist’s plans.

One of the best ways to accomplish this is to create an antagonist out of a former friend or ally:

The gradual evolution of friend into enemy can be a great basis for a story.

 

When to Use an Antagonist

Antagonists are primarily a feature of fiction, of course, but they can also be valuable in non-fiction writing, especially biography, history, and journalism. In these genres, you can make your writing more readable by presenting the information in the form of a narrative, with a protagonist and antagonist that stay consistent throughout the story.

When choosing a protagonist and antagonist, of course, it’s important to remember that the majority of historical episodes had no clearly defined “good guy” and “bad guy” – just two sides that had a political or territorial dispute. For example, if you were writing a story about the Napoleonic Wars, your protagonist could be the British admiral Horatio Nelson, in which case the antagonist would be Napoleon; but you could also write the opposite story, with Napoleon as the protagonist and Nelson as the antagonist. Be aware that your choice of perspective will place a significant (perhaps unfair!) spin on the history.

A good antagonist can improve any kind of narrative-based writing, whether fictional or non-fictional. This is obviously less important in argument-based writing, though. And, of course, you could always consider leaving the antagonist out and writing a no-antagonist story.

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