The Painted Door

The Painted Door Literary Elements

Genre

Short story; prairie fiction

Setting and Context

The story is set on a Canadian prairie farmstead in the 1930s.

Narrator and Point of View

The story is narrated by an unnamed third-person limited omniscient narrator; the point of view stays mainly with Ann, the protagonist.

Tone and Mood

The story's tone is contemplative and dramatic; the mood is claustrophobic.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Ann is the protagonist; John and Steven are her antagonists.

Major Conflict

The major conflict in the story is that Ann's isolation and lack of fulfillment cause her to believe her husband is not coming home and that she is therefore justified in cheating on him with their neighbor.

Climax

The story reaches its climax when Ann discovers that John, now dead, has white paint on his frozen palm—evidence that he had in fact returned home to find Ann in bed with their neighbor.

Foreshadowing

Ross foreshadows Ann and Steven's mutual attraction when the narrator details how Ann and Steven once danced together six or seven times during a barn dance night.

Understatement

Allusions

Imagery

Paradox

Parallelism

Metonymy and Synecdoche

Personification