Flat and round are E. M. Forster’s terms (from Aspects of the Novel, 1927) for the two basic kinds of character in fiction. A flat character is built around a single trait, quality, or idea. A round character is complex, contradictory, and capable of surprising the reader in a way that is convincing.
Forster’s distinction is descriptive, not evaluative — flat characters are not failed round characters. They serve different functions:
- Flat characters are immediately recognizable and consistently predictable. The reader grasps them on first encounter and doesn’t need to revise that understanding. They work as foils, comic figures, representatives of a type, or structural necessities (the bartender who delivers information, the antagonist’s loyal lieutenant). Dickens’s novels are populated with vivid flat characters — each defined by one or two traits rendered so sharply they become iconic.
- Round characters resist summary. They contain contradictions that the reader must hold simultaneously: brave and fearful, generous and selfish, perceptive about others and blind about themselves. They change over the course of the narrative — or resist change in ways that reveal something about the pressure they’re under. The protagonist of a literary novel is almost always round.
A related distinction is static vs. dynamic: a static character is the same at the end of the story as at the beginning; a dynamic character has changed. Flat characters are usually static (their single trait persists). Round characters can be either static or dynamic — a character can be deeply complex and still refuse to change, which may be the story’s point.
The mistake is making every character round. A novel where every minor figure has a detailed inner life and a personal arc loses focus — the reader can’t tell whose story matters. The craft is distributing depth appropriately: round treatment for the characters whose inner lives drive the narrative, flat treatment for those who serve other functions.
Related terms
- character — the broader concept that flat/round specifies
- protagonist — almost always a round character
- arc — round characters may have arcs; flat characters typically don’t
- interiority — round characters are typically given interiority; flat characters typically aren’t