![]() Death is the ultimate trope, the inescapable conclusion, and as such is fundamentally uninteresting. In all of the stories, the characters also eventually die. Atwood argues that an emphasis on formulaic plot elements such as marriage and “happy endings” ignores the things that make stories important and original. It may be nearly inevitable, and it may provide some measure of happiness, but once one has achieved the goal of marriage, there’s really nothing left to do-only sideshows and irrelevant plot filler. And while all of the characters either succeed in, or tragically long for, marriage, Atwood ultimately describes it as a sterile, uninteresting component of the story. This isn’t just a regressive viewpoint that robs other elements of life of meaning, but, in Atwood’s estimation, it’s simply bad writing. Everything after marriage, notwithstanding disaster, is merely denouement. Whether in scenario A, where marriage is a happy default, or in any of the other scenarios, where marriage is the goal of the story even if it is never ultimately realized, marriage is seen as the culmination of the romantic plot. Marriage is assumed to be an integral part of the “happy ending,” no matter what. While the details sometimes differ, marriage is ultimately uninteresting as a plot development because of its sheer inevitability. Marriage is another foundational plot element to all of the stories that Atwood introduces. Whether describing a lovelorn heroine or a love triangle with a violent end, these plots rely on the same tropes and stereotypes, rendering them, for Atwood, deeply boring stories. Scenario B and C interject tragedy into the plot-they are not simply “happy endings.” However, they, too, follow a formulaic pattern, and all ultimately arrive at scenario A. One could literally swap the names of the characters from other scenarios into it without meaningfully changing any of the broad plot strokes. Atwood argues that the ubiquity of this ending renders it virtually meaningless-it is uninteresting precisely because of its generic character. What happens next?” Scenario A, which establishes the default ending of many of the other subsequent scenarios as well, offers a “happy ending” to the initial romance. This is the first building block of the plot of all the stories-as Atwood puts it “ John and Mary meet. ![]() The various iterations of the stories all start with an initial romance, whether explicit or implied. In doing so, Atwood asserts that the broad strokes of a life-who sleeps with whom, who marries whom, who dies and how-as less interesting than the day to day trials and motivations of characters, or as she puts it, the “How and Why.” ![]() “Happy Endings” details the broad plot arcs of a variety of different stories, poking fun at the traditional structure that underpins so many of them. Beyond illustrating the problematic dynamics underpinning sexual and romantic relationships, “Happy Endings” is concerned with the nature of storytelling itself.
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