Straight talk from the sisters about blood, sweat and ink
Last year we ran a whole series of posts called Masterplots Theater from A to Z. Because we had some plots that started with the same letters, we had to cut several fantastic masterplots. ‘Forbidden Love’ was one of our unhappy victims as Heather wrote about the Fool Triumphant Masterplot instead. We did cover several other love-related plots in the series, Buddy Love, Happily-Ever- After Love, Unrequited Love, Love Story, but today Forbidden Love gets its own special post.
Within moments of meeting (either before or after) the lovers are confronted with the knowledge the relationship is taboo in their society. Common taboo themes are: adultery, class differences, economic factors, geographic boundaries, religious restrictions, race-related tensions, family feuds, May-December romances and same-sex relationships.
Because of the social issues, the lovers are parted and reunited several times during the course of the story.
This masterplot is a fantastic subplot, and was used very successfully in the film BLADE RUNNER where it gave a bittersweet edge to the story’s ending.
I actually never thought about this before, but quite a few of my favorite stories are tales of forbidden love.
Thanks, James! It is a great masterplot. Glad you liked the post.
I don’t often (if ever) pick up a “romance” novel but, honestly, what you’ve talked about here is in quite a few of the YA dystopian novels I read. It’s very common. And it works.
Hi Sarah, This is used in YA all the time! Matched comes right to my mind, but there are tons of others too. It does work great! And since you can change it up so many different ways it never gets stale.