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The character in a work of fiction whom the reader wishes to win. The opposite of the antagonist, and usually pitted against them. If your question is more about any character, use the 'characters' tag instead.

1 vote

Disappearing Protagonist

All other things being equal, yes. Could a great author make it work? probably. Would I recommend it? No. It's hard to say more without knowing the context, and why you'd want to do this.
Chris Sunami's user avatar
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2 votes

Can I write a protagonist that speaks broken English without annoying the reader?

Writers have responded to this challenge in many different ways over the years. The current common practice is to provide enough of the language pattern for flavor, and then render largely in standard …
Chris Sunami's user avatar
  • 56.5k
2 votes

Is this sort of character arc too confusing?

It sounds like an interesting idea. Usually with something of this sort, there's no answer possible based just on the concept, it's all about the execution. I don't think there's necessarily anything …
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0 votes

How far I can write about a protagonist with a different ethnicity of me?

I'm not theoretically opposed to a white author writing a black protagonist, but I've rarely seen it done well, and often seen it done badly, even by people of good will and intentions. … It might be worth taking the time to ask yourself why you're choosing a protagonist so far outside your own experience. …
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20 votes

How unadvisable is it to flip the protagonist into a villain?

Even these examples, however, are more properly hero-to-antihero transitions, where the ambiguous figure retains the role of protagonist. …
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5 votes

My protagonist being needed for my story is a life changing event, does that mean the event ...

Because it's such a dramatic moment, it feels like a wasted opportunity to leave it entirely "off-camera." But it doesn't necessarily make sense to start your story there if the main action is going t …
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24 votes
Accepted

Can I conceal an antihero's insanity - and should I?

The same is true for the --much less likeable --protagonist of Woody Allen's Match Point. …
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