When a character has an epiphany in a story, they experience a sudden realization or insight that often leads to a significant change in their understanding of a situation or themselves. This moment of clarity can be transformative for the character and can drive the plot forward in new and unexpected ways.
An epiphany in literature is a major character's moment of realization or awareness.
Death and how you face it. How death makes you look at yourself and how the main character in the story had such an unproductive life. The reluctancy to succeed and blame it on others.
Changing the tone makes the story and the character sound more believable. You don't want a really serious, horrible thing happening to your character and then have them think "Oh no, it's okay." You want them to think, "What the heck?" or something (depending on what has happening in the story).
To have a religious epiphany means a person realizes his faith or he or she is convinced that an event or happening was caused by a deity or being of his or her faith.
An epiphany is "a sudden, powerful, and often spiritual or life-changing realization that a character experiences in an otherwise ordinary moment."
Epiphany - coined by James Joyce.
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