Transcript Document

Literary Terms
We will be using these literary terms
throughout the school year.
You need to keep up with your notes.
Don’t lose your terms! You might be
able to use them –
be RESPONSIBLE!!
We will use the following terms:
Antagonist
Denotation
Mood
Exposition
Falling Action
Flashback
Point of View
Setting
Figures of Speech
Irony
Metaphor
Personification
Protagonist
Connotation
Plot
Rising Action
Resolution
Foreshadowing
Paradox
Theme
Hyperbole
Antithesis
Simile
Alliteration
Diction
Imagery
Anaphora
Climax
Conflict
Suspense
Parallelism
Tone
Juxtaposition
Oxymoron
Indirect vs. Direct Characterization
Indirect
Direct
When information is learned
about the character through
the speech/dialogue
When the author gives
descriptions/information
about the character
Ex: “Oh, I’m so upset that I
can’t reach the sardines on
that top shelf!”
Ex: He was a short man that
loved sardines.
Protagonist
• The Protagonist is the main
character in a literary work
• Can you name some famous
Protagonists that are found in
literature?
Antagonist
•The Antagonist is a
character or force in conflict
with a main character, or
protagonist.
Character Types
There are several character types:
Main character-one of the most important
characters in the story.
Minor character- all other characters.
Round character- they show varied and
contradictory traits.
Flat character- reveals only one personality
trait.
Character Types Cont.
Stereotype- a flat character that is familiar
and often repeated. (Dumb Blonde, Dumb
Jock, Band Nerd, etc.).
Dynamic character- develops within in the
course of a literary work.
Static character- they remain the same
throughout the entire story.
Foil- a character, usually minor, designed to
highlight qualities of a major character.
Diction
• Diction is the manner in which
•
•
we express words; the wording
used.
Diction = enunciation
Some easy examples are:
Don’t say ‘goin’ – say ‘going’, Don’t say ‘wanna’ – say
‘want to’
Denotation
The denotation of a word
is its dictionary meaning,
independent of other
associations that the
word may have.
Connotation
The connotation of a word is the set of
ideas associated with it in addition to
its explicit meaning. The connotation
of a word can be personal, based on
individual experiences. More often,
cultural connotations – those
recognizable by most people in a
group – determine a writer’s word
choices.
Denotation versus Connotation
Examples –
Cheap is “low in cost” (denotation) but
“stingy” or “poorly made” are the
connotations of cheap
Let’s use the word HOT
The denotation (or dictionary definition – remember d in denotation =
dictionary) of HOT is: having a temperature higher
than that of a human body.
However, when you say “Man! He/She is hot!”, are
you saying “Man! He is having a temperature
higher than that of a human body!”? No!!
You are saying the CONNOTATION of HOT – which
could mean a variety of things – man he/she is
cute, attractive, beautiful, and many other
meanings – those come from personal
experiences and cultural meanings, etc.
Imagery
Imagery is words or phrases
that appeal to one or more of
the five senses. Writers use
imagery to describe how their
subjects look, sound, feel,
taste, and smell.
MOOD
Mood, or atmosphere, is the feeling
created in the reader by a literary
work or passage. Writers use many
devices to create mood, including
images, dialogue, setting, and plot.
Often, a writer creates a mood at the
beginning of a work and then
sustains the mood throughout.
Sometimes, however, the mood of the
work changes dramatically.
Plot
Plot is the sequence of events. The first event
causes the second, the second causes the third,
and so forth.
In most novels, dramas, short stories, and narrative
poems, the plot involves both characters and a
central conflict.
The plot usually begins with an exposition that
introduces the setting, the characters, and the
basic situation. This is introduced and developed.
The conflict then increases until it reaches a high
point of interest or suspense, the climax. The
climax is followed by the falling action, or end, of
the central conflict. Any events that occur during
the falling action make up the resolution.
PLOTLINE
Climax
Resolution
Exposition
Conflict Introduced
Exposition
The Exposition is the
introduction. It is the part
of the work that introduces
the characters, setting, and
basic situation.
Rising Action
Rising Action is the part of the
plot that begins to occur as
soon as the conflict is
introduced. The rising action
adds complications to the
conflict and increases reader
interest.
Climax
The Climax is the point of
greatest emotional intensity,
interest, or suspense in the
plot of a narrative. The climax
typically comes at the turning
point in a story or drama.
Falling Action
Falling Action is the action that
typically follows the climax and
reveals its results.
Resolution
The Resolution is the part of
the plot that concludes the
falling action by revealing or
suggesting the outcome of
the conflict.
Conflict
Conflict is the struggle
between opposing forces in
a story or play. There are
two types of conflict that
exist in literature.
External Conflict
External conflict exists when a character
struggles against some outside force, such
as another character, nature, society, or fate.
Man vs. Man Man vs. Nature Man vs. Society
Internal Conflict
Internal conflict exists within the mind of a
character who is torn between different
courses of action.
Man vs. Himself
Flashback
A flashback is a literary device in
which an earlier episode,
conversation, or event is inserted
into the sequence of events.
Often flashbacks are presented as
a memory of the narrator or of
another character.
Flashback continued…
The movie Titanic is told almost entirely in a
flashback.
What are some other films that contain
flashback to help tell stories?
Holes
Willy Wonka
Think of some more…
Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing is the author’s use of clues
to hint at what might happen later in the
story. Writers use foreshadowing to build
their readers’ expectations and to create
suspense. This is used to help readers
prepare for what is to come.
Can you think of an
element of
foreshadowing?
Suspense
Suspense is the growing interest and
excitement readers experience while
awaiting a climax or resolution in a work
of literature. It is a feeling of anxious
uncertainty about the outcome of events.
Writers create suspense by raising
questions in the minds of their readers.
Point of View
Point of View is the perspective, or vantage
point, from which a story is told. It is the
relationship of the narrator to the story.
First-person is told by a character who uses
the first-person pronoun “I”.
Third-person limited point of view is the
point of view where the narrator uses
third-person pronouns such as “he” and
“she” to refer to the characters.
Third-person omniscient- same as limited
but the narrator is all knowing.
Setting
The setting of a literary work is the time and place of
the action.
The setting includes all the details of a place and time
– the year, the time of day, even the weather. The
place may be a specific country, state, region,
community, neighborhood, building, institution, or
home.
In most stories, the setting serves as a backdrop – a
context in which the characters interact. The
setting of a story often helps to create a particular
mood, or feeling.
Theme
The theme of a literary work is its central
message, concern, or purpose. A theme can
usually be expressed as a generalization, or
general statement, about people or life. The
theme may be stated directly by the writer
although it is more often presented indirectly.
When the theme is stated indirectly, the reader
must figure out the theme by looking carefully
at what the work reveals about the people or
about life.
Tone
Tone is a reflection of a writer’s or speaker’s
attitude toward a subject of a poem, story, or
other literary work. Tone may be
communicated through words and details that
express particular emotions and that evoke
and emotional response from the reader.
For example, word choice or phrasing may seem
to convey respect, anger, lightheartedness, or
sarcasm.
Figures of Speech
A figure of speech is a specific device or
kind of figurative language, such as
hyperbole, metaphor, personification,
simile, or understatement.
Figurative language is used for descriptive
effect, often to imply ideas indirectly. It is
not meant to be taken literally. Figurative
language is used to state ideas in vivid
and imaginative ways.
Metaphor
A Metaphor is a type of speech that
compares or equates two or more things
that have something in common. A
metaphor does NOT use like or as.
Example: Life is a box
of chocolates.
Simile
A Simile is another figure of speech that
compares seemingly unlike things.
Simile’s DO use the words like or as.
Example: Her voice was
like nails on a
chalkboard.
NOT a simile: I am not as fast as Michael.
(there is NO comparison of unlike things
going on here)
Oxymoron
An Oxymoron is a figure of speech that is a
combination of seemingly contradictory
words.
Examples:
Same difference
Pretty ugly
Jumbo shrimp
Personification
Personification is a
figure of speech in
which an animal,
object, force of
nature, or idea is
given human qualities
or characteristics.
Example: Tears began
to fall from the dark
clouds.
Alliteration
Alliteration is the repetition of sounds, most
often consonant sounds, at the beginning
of words. Alliteration gives emphasis to
words.
Example: Peter Piper picked a peck of
pickled peppers
Irony
Irony is when something happens that is the
opposite of what’s expected.
Dramatic Irony: when the audience knows
what will happen before the characters
Situational Irony: when something happens
that’s unexpected
Verbal Irony: when a character says one
thing but means another
(over/understated)
Hyperbole
A hyperbole is an extreme over-exageration.
Ex: Yo mama’s so fat, she’s got her own zip
code.
Paradox
A statement that contradicts itself
Ex: I always lie.
Ex: She hid inside herself.
Anaphora
The repetition of the same word or group of
words at the beginning of successive
clauses; it helps to establish a strong
rhythm and produces a powerful
emotional effect.
Ex: I have a dream…
Parallelism
Parallelism is the use of components in a
sentence that are grammatically the same;
or similar in their construction, sound,
meaning or meter.
This method adds balance and rhythm to
sentences giving ideas a smoother flow
and thus can be persuasive because of the
repetition it employs.
Example of Parallelism
"Today's students can put dope in their
veins or hope in their brains. If they can
conceive it and believe it, they can
achieve it. They must know it is not their
aptitude but their attitude that will
determine their altitude." - Jesse Jackson
Juxtaposition
Juxtaposition is a literary technique in which
two or more ideas, places, characters and
their actions are placed side by side in a
narrative or a poem for the purpose of
developing comparisons and contrasts.
Ex: “O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright!
It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night
Like a rich jewel in an Ethiope’s ear;”
Shakespeare uses the juxtaposition of light and
darkness here to describe Juliet’s beauty.
Antithesis
Antithesis, literal meaning opposite, is a
rhetorical device in which two opposite
ideas are put together in a sentence to
achieve a contrasting effect.
Ex: “It was the best of times, it was the
worst of times, it was the age of
wisdom, it was the age of
foolishness,…”