Denouement, in literature, is the end part of a story after the climax. It consists of tidily finishing story lines and settling the characters back to their normal lives. Note that denouement only occurs in happily ending stories. Tragic endings are termed catastrophe. There is a "turning point" between the climax and the denouement, termed "peripeteia". ... The climax of a narrative work is its point of highest tension or drama. ... Catastrophe (Gk. ... Peripeteia (Greek, περιπετεῖα) is a reversal of circumstances, or turning point. ...
In An Inspector Calls, the denouement consists of Mr. Birling receiving a phone call saying that a police inspector is on his way to ask some questions. This comes as a shock to the audience as well as the characters because they had just found out that the police inspector Goole which just left was a fraud. This is considered a denouement because it occurs at the end of the story and serves to tie up any loose ends that might otherwise interfere with the audience's feeling of completion to the story. An Inspector Calls is a popular drama of 1946, by the British dramatist J.B. Priestley. ...
The term is borrowed into English from the French and is usually pronounced in the French way. The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
This is related to the detective denouement.
It is also the French word for when a superhero defeats a supervillain, or vice versa.
The twelfth book of Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, entitled The Penultimate Peril, is set primarily in the Hotel Denouement. Lemony Snicket is a fictional character, the fictional author and narrator of the A Series of Unfortunate Events books, actually written by Daniel Handler. ... It has been suggested that The Nameless Novel be merged into this article or section. ... In Lemony Snickets Series of Unfortunate Events, the Hotel Denouement is the last safe place for the V.F.D.. It is a large building organised in the same way as a library, by the Dewey Decimal System. ...
Denouement, in literature, is the end part of a story after the climax.
There is a "turning point" between the climax and the denouement, termed "peripeteia".
This is considered a denouement because it occurs at the end of the story and serves to tie up any loose ends that might otherwise interfere with the audience's feeling of completion to the story.
"Denouement," reveals and summarizes both Fearing's interpretation of the nature and function of mass culture and the possibilities of political resistance to it through a kind of negative dialectic.
In "Denouement" the voice of the powers that be, which I shall call (applying Fearing's own terminology) the voice of evasion, is explicitly identified with the mass media.
But "Denouement" suggests an important difference between Fearing's position and that of the Frankfurt school, and even that of his onetime colleagues at the Partisan Review: high culture as a repository of ideals, or of an oppositional negativity, is not for him, finally, a privileged category.