IN MEDIAS RES
'''In medias res''', also '''medias in res''' (Latin for "into the middle of things") is a literary and artistic technique where the narrative starts in the middle of the story instead of from its beginning (''ab ovo'' or ''ab initio''). The characters, setting, and conflict are often introduced through a series of flashbacks or through characters relating past events to each other. Classical works such as Homer's ''Iliad'' and Virgil's ''Aeneid'' begin in the middle of the story. Dante's Divine Comedy also begins in ''medias res''.
The terms ''in medias res'' and ''ab ovo'' (literally "from the egg") both come from the Roman poet Horace's ''Ars Poetica'' ("Art of Poetry", or "The Poetic Arts"), lines 147–148, where he describes his ideal for an epic poet[1]:
The "double egg" is a reference to the origin of the Trojan War with the mythical birth of Helen and Clytemnestra from an egg laid by their mother, Leda, after she was raped by Zeus in the form of a swan.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel ''The Scarlet Letter'' begins in ''medias res''. Hester Pyrnne has already committed the act of adultery and has already given birth to her child, Pearl.
This narrative method has proven very popular throughout the ages, including frequent use in Modernist literature, e.g. Joseph Conrad's ''Heart of Darkness'' and Ford Madox Ford's ''The Good Soldier''. The technique can also be seen in cinema, including Gillo Pontecorvo's ''The Battle of Algiers'', Martin Scorsese's ''Goodfellas'', Mel Gibson's ''The Passion of the Christ'', Taylor Hackford's ''Devil's Advocate,'' George Lucas' original '' film, Quentin Tarantino's ''Pulp Fiction'' and ''Kill Bill'', and the Korean film ''Oldboy''.
Though not strictly in medias res, the film ''Memento'' is a very good example of storytelling through flashbacks – while the main part of the film plays in reverse chronology, the backstory is explained via a separate series of flashbacks running in the correct order, with the two narratives converging at the end of the film. The start of the film is, therefore, both the end of one sequence of events and the start of the other, with the literal middle of the timeline falling at the end of the film.
In television, the modern TV show ''Lost'' starts ''medias in res'' explicitly where the show starts with several characters crash-landing through the island. Over the course of several seasons of the show, we learn about the characters through flashbacks. A sitcom which uses the device is ''How I Met Your Mother'' on CBS.
Many non-fiction articles from Reader's Digest use this technique of storytelling.
★ Reverse chronology
★ Flashback/analepsis
★ Flashforward/prolepsis
1. Ars Poetica, , , Horace, , ,
The terms ''in medias res'' and ''ab ovo'' (literally "from the egg") both come from the Roman poet Horace's ''Ars Poetica'' ("Art of Poetry", or "The Poetic Arts"), lines 147–148, where he describes his ideal for an epic poet[1]:
The "double egg" is a reference to the origin of the Trojan War with the mythical birth of Helen and Clytemnestra from an egg laid by their mother, Leda, after she was raped by Zeus in the form of a swan.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel ''The Scarlet Letter'' begins in ''medias res''. Hester Pyrnne has already committed the act of adultery and has already given birth to her child, Pearl.
This narrative method has proven very popular throughout the ages, including frequent use in Modernist literature, e.g. Joseph Conrad's ''Heart of Darkness'' and Ford Madox Ford's ''The Good Soldier''. The technique can also be seen in cinema, including Gillo Pontecorvo's ''The Battle of Algiers'', Martin Scorsese's ''Goodfellas'', Mel Gibson's ''The Passion of the Christ'', Taylor Hackford's ''Devil's Advocate,'' George Lucas' original '' film, Quentin Tarantino's ''Pulp Fiction'' and ''Kill Bill'', and the Korean film ''Oldboy''.
Though not strictly in medias res, the film ''Memento'' is a very good example of storytelling through flashbacks – while the main part of the film plays in reverse chronology, the backstory is explained via a separate series of flashbacks running in the correct order, with the two narratives converging at the end of the film. The start of the film is, therefore, both the end of one sequence of events and the start of the other, with the literal middle of the timeline falling at the end of the film.
In television, the modern TV show ''Lost'' starts ''medias in res'' explicitly where the show starts with several characters crash-landing through the island. Over the course of several seasons of the show, we learn about the characters through flashbacks. A sitcom which uses the device is ''How I Met Your Mother'' on CBS.
Many non-fiction articles from Reader's Digest use this technique of storytelling.
| Contents |
| See also |
| References |
See also
★ Reverse chronology
★ Flashback/analepsis
★ Flashforward/prolepsis
References
1. Ars Poetica, , , Horace, , ,
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