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Also known as: Rhetorical Devices

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Also known as: Rhetorical Devices * * * * * * * * In the above sentence, we understand immediately that her home had some of the characteristics of a prison. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Also known as: Rhetorical Devices


1
Literary Elements
  • Also known as Rhetorical Devices

2
Characterization
  • The way in which the author creates and develops
    his/her characters.
  • Direct characterization characteristics told to
    the reader through the text.
  • Indirect characterization characteristics
    discovered by the reader through dialogue,
    characters actions and interactions with others.

3
Point of View (POV)
  • The way in which the author chooses to tell the
    story.
  • Four main points of view

4
4 Points of View
  • 1st person the story is told by a character of
    the story using I speak. Think personal
    narratives!
  • (Examples Twilight, Lightning Thief, La Linea,
    The Dream Bearer)
  • 2nd person rarely used in fiction. Uses You
    speak. Most often seen in how-to or self help
    writing. (Example How to get Organized without
    Losing It)

5
4 Points of View (cont.)
  • 3rd person limited the story is told by a
    narrator who is not part of the story. The
    narrator follows ONE character through the story.
  • (Examples Bar Code Tattoo, Stormbreaker, The
    Conch Bearer)
  • 3rd person omniscient the story is told by a
    narrator who is not part of the story. This
    narrator can follow SEVERAL or ALL characters at
    the same time through the story. Usually uses
    different chapters to tell about different
    characters.
  • (Examples Harry Potter, Rangers Apprentice,
    Artemis Fowl)

6
Conflict
  • Major or important problem of the story
  • Does not always have to be a bad thing
  • Stories have multiple conflicts.

7
Internal vs. External Conflicts
Internal Conflict Conflict that occurs inside the
mind of a character An argument you have with
yourself A difficult decision that has to be
made Internal inside invisible-ish
External Conflict Conflict that occurs outside of
the mind External conflicts can be seen. A fist
fight or argument with a friend A character
battling against a flood
8
4 Types of Conflicts
  • Character vs. character external
  • Character vs. nature/animal external
  • Character vs. God/uncontrollable force external
  • Character vs. self internal
  • Be able to give and recognize examples of each. ?

9
Suspense
  • Is a feeling of growing tension and excitement.
  • It makes the reader want to keep reading to find
    out what will happen next.
  • Roller coasters and scary movies are suspenseful
    (and fun!)

10
Foreshadowing
  • A hint about an event that will occur later in
    the story.
  • Often designed to build suspense and keep the
    reader guessing about the outcome of an event.
  • Example At the time, we had no idea that we
    would never see her again.
  • Chapter Two of Downsiders hints at the causes of
    the Great Shaft Disaster which unfolds later in
    the story.

11
Mood
  • the feeling the writer creates for the readers
  • Moods may be suspenseful, sad, exciting or calm
  • The young boy sat upright in bed, sure that he
    had heard a sound in the hallway. He strained to
    listen more closely. Were those footsteps that
    he heard creeping towards his room? But how can
    behe was home alone tonight. He looked over at
    his door and noticed the doorknob begin to slowly
    turn in a clockwise direction. Whoever or
    whatever was in the hallway was about to come
    into his room!

12
Flashback
  • When the author takes the reader back in time to
    see an event that has already occurred.
  • Helps the reader understand a situation better.
  • Gives background information
  • Often occurs as a dream, daydreaming, or a
    character being lost in thought.

13
Flashback
  • Turn to page 7 of The Conch Bearer
  • Skim and scan the page. Can you find the
    foreshadowing within the flashback?

14
Tone
  • the writers attitude toward his/her subject
  • Tone can often be inferred by analyzing the
    writers choice of words and details.

15
Symbol
  • A person, place or object that stands for
    something else.
  • Often stand for something invisible like a
    feeling or idea
  • What is a common symbol for
  • Freedom - Love

16
Plot/Plot Chart
  • Plot - the pattern of events or main story in a
    piece of fiction or drama
  • A Plot Chart is a graphic representation of the
    events in a story

17
Alliteration
  • The repeating of the same BEGINNING sound in
    several words near each other.
  • Tongue twisters are great examples of
    alliteration!
  • Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.

18
Hyperbole
  • An extreme exaggeration that emphasizes a point
  • It is not meant to be taken literally
  • Example I am so hungry I could eat a horse!

19
  • Appetite
  • In a house the size of a postage stamplived a
    man as big as a barge.His mouth could drink the
    entire riverYou could say it was rather
    largeFor dinner he would eat a trillion
    beansAnd a silo full of grain,Washed it down
    with a tanker of milkAs if he were a drain.

20
Personification
  • A type of metaphor in which human characteristics
    or feelings are given to an animal or object
  • Example The young kitten jumped for joy!
  • Example The grass whispers softly in the wind.

21
  • The Cat The Fiddle
  • Hey diddle, diddle,The cat and the fiddle,The
    cow jumped over the moonThe little dog laughed
    To see such sport,And the dish ran away with
    the spoon.
  • By Mother Goose

22
Personification Lesson
23
Simile
  • A way of describing something using the words
    like or as in a comparison
  • Example Her hair is as beautiful as a sunset.
  • Example His eyes twinkled like stars in the sky.

24
  • Flint
  • An emerald is as green as grass,A ruby red as
    bloodA sapphire shines as blue as heavenA
    flint lies in the mud.
  • A diamond is a brilliant stone,To catch the
    world's desireAn opal holds a fiery sparkBut
    a flint holds a fire.
  • Christina Rossetti 1830-1894

25
Simile
26
Metaphor
  • All the world's a stage,And all the men and
    women merely players,They have their exits and
    their entrances
  • William Shakespeare

27
Metaphor
  • A metaphor is a figure of speech that says that
    one thing is another different thing. This allows
    us to use fewer words and forces the reader or
    listener to find the similarities.
  • The simplest form of metaphor is "The first
    thing is a second thing."
  • Her home was a prison.

28
The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes
  • The wind was a torrent of darkness among the
    gusty trees,The moon was a ghostly galleon
    tossed upon cloudy seas,The road was a ribbon of
    moonlight over the purple moor,And the
    highwayman came riding--Riding--riding--The
    highwayman came riding, up to the old inn-door.

29
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30
Theme
  • The message or moral of the story.
  • This is what the author wants the reader to
    understand or come away from the story with.
  • It is often a message about life or human nature.
  • Themes are not single words they are big ideas
    or sentences.
  • One story can have multiple themes.
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