I keep running across people who think conflict is the root of all plot. Google “conflict in fiction” and you get 155 million hits. One of the first began with a definition: “Character + want + obstacle = conflict.” Variations of that formula occur over and over in posts on plotting. “Conflict is at the heart of all stories,” trumpets another, and “Literature would be a little boring without conflict” asserts a third.

Now, it is undeniably true that most stories about happy people happily being happy aren’t terribly interesting to most readers. And it is also true that most stories about people unhappily sunk in misery and doing nothing about it are likewise not terribly interesting to most readers. (In both cases, there are “slice of life” stories, twist stories, and various other types of stories that do manage to be interesting, but they are usually the exception, or at the least a niche market.)

However, there is nothing that says that people have to be “in conflict” with something or someone in order to be unhappy, or even that they have to be unhappy in order to try to change their circumstances. In fact, I submit that the only way to make “Conflict is at the heart of all stories” work for all stories is to redefine “conflict” so broadly that the term becomes essentially meaningless.

Shirley Jackson’s marvelous short story “One Ordinary Day, With Peanuts” does not contain anything that I would define as “conflict”; instead, it presents the reader with a mystery – why is this man going around doing good deeds? – which is only made stranger by the revelations at the end of the story (which never do answer the question). There are stories that revolve around puzzles (treasure hunts of various sorts), competitions (winning the big game), survival in the wilderness, or achieving a worthy but difficult goal, which can contain conflict, but which often don’t (and certainly don’t require it, at least not the way I define conflict).

On the flip side, Olaf Stapledon’s Last and First Men doesn’t fit the above definitions, because there aren’t any characters or wants, though there is plenty of conflict as he describes billions of years of “future history” and evolution.

To me, conflict implies some kind of struggle between two opposites – an argument or a disagreement between two people, a war between nations, a struggle between two people or groups with incompatible goals, or an internal struggle between two courses of action or beliefs (most commonly “I want both A and B, but I can’t have both”; for instance “I want to make my parents happy and I want to be happy; they won’t be happy unless I become a lawyer, but I won’t be happy unless I become a musician” or “I want to believe I am a good person, and I want to have a lot of money right now; I can steal that wad of cash and have money, but then I won’t be a good person, or I can leave it be and be a good person, but not have money”).

Without that duality, I don’t see conflict. I see goals and problems and obstacles, which make for a fine, interesting stories, but I don’t see conflict. Of course, you can define all of Jack London’s wilderness survival stories as “a conflict between Man and Nature” – and a good many people do – but to me, Nature is just sitting there, doing its thing. London’s protagonists are certainly struggling against their circumstances, but it’s like me struggling to run up a hill – I don’t think of that as me being “in conflict” with the hill, just me doing something that’s difficult because the hill is steep and I’m out of shape.

I think that many people see conflict this way, and as a result, asserting that “conflict is the heart of stories” and “literature would be boring without it” makes many writers worry unnecessarily about whether they’re doing good work or not. In extreme cases, they add unnecessary arguments, subplots, and antagonists in an attempt to “add conflict,” and then wonder why their story isn’t working.

“Conflict” is, in my opinion, an overrated subcategory of “problems,” which is, also in my opinion, what one actually wants in order to end up with an interesting story. “I am really hungry” is a problem; so is “This porridge is too hot to eat.” Neither one of them puts Goldilocks in conflict with anything or anyone, but “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” is still a perfectly good story. “I am going to become a better artist than X” can be a conflict, if X is the character’s sister who is equally determined to beat them, or it could just as easily be the character’s motivation/inspiration/goal, if X is Leonardo da Vinci or Picasso – no conflict involved, just a really hard thing to accomplish.

I think conflict gets so much emphasis because it is relatively easy to identify in its dictionary-definition version (“serious disagreement; argument; armed struggle; clash of opposing wishes or needs; incompatibility between opinions, principles, or interests”), and also an easy term to stretch to cover some of the things that obviously make for good stories, but that don’t quite fit into the “us vs. them” that’s implied by the word “conflict.” (See “Man vs. Nature, above…) Writing – and characterization, and plotting – isn’t easy, though, and trying to boil it down into something that is rarely is as helpful as it looks at first glance.

5 Comments
  1. “I keep running across people who think conflict is the root of all plot.”

    Of course you do. For example, I keep coming in here and commenting (almost) every week! 😀

    “To me, conflict implies some kind of struggle between two opposites…”

    Fair enough. For me, conflict is any kind of dissatisfaction with the status quo, whether with self (“I’m not who I want to be”), family (“I’m not going to do what they want me to”), society (“I’m not going to fit in the way they want me to here either”) or even world (“This utopia has a flaw, and I’m going to fix it!”).

    So I do consider conflict the heart of everything except, as you said, slices of life, character studies and so on. There’s nothing wrong with “a day in the life” stories; they can be very cool. But in general, if someone doesn’t want *something* to change, where is the story to go?

    Anyway, I don’t disagree with you as much as I might sound like. You have to start somewhere when spinning tales, and whether setting, character or plot is your starting point, presumably you want the agon- (from the Ancient Greek word for to struggle, contend, or fight) part of your protagonist(s) to do something. And it can be a problem to solve or a conflict to resolve, but either way it gives them something to act upon…even if only in their own head(s).

    • I’ve thought about this too long and too hard when I should have been doing other things (like, sleep), and I may have figured out where the disconnect is. I found guidance from who else but our hostess. This is from her entry Keeping the Reader Reading (https://www.pcwrede.com/keeping-the-reader-reading/), which I consult often enough to have bookmarked:

      “In its simplest form, how you keep the reader going is a matter of presenting the reader with an explicit or implicit question … and then eventually answering the question at the right moment.”

      For whatever reason, I have always lumped that in with conflict and resolution. (The conflict is in the reader wanting the question answered, and the resolution is when they get the answer.)

      Obviously my definition of “conflict” in terms of story is far too expansive. I’m not quite sure what the word or phrase is that I should use for what-I-see-as-conflict-but-really-isn’t. Maybe this can be the seed of a future entry…? Or maybe one of the rest of you can clue me in.

  2. At one point while I was writing the script for my upcoming webcomic, a friend asked, “Who’s the antagonist?” This threw me off momentarily, because there isn’t one; the story is mostly about the MCs exploring and pursuing knowledge. There is a bit of conflict as you define it – an argument/clash of goals with another character, which precipitates the next series of events – but it isn’t the kind of plot that needs a villain.

  3. thanks for writing this post. i am taking my first creative writing classes and that is what they are telling me, and i don’t really like conflict or stories with a lot of conflict, and kept feeling like i had to just include it anyway. thinking about a goal and an obstacle makes me feel a lot better about the whole thing.

  4. Nearly every time I have a story that isn’t “working” it’s because I don’t have an adversary for the character. Whether that’s another person or a situation or a goal or something else, once I add/recognize it, the story progresses. I don’t know if an adversary automatically equals conflict, but I think the idea (spoken above) of working toward a goal is ultimately what a conventional story needs in some fashion.