Title: Exploring Literary Techniques One
1Exploring Literary Techniques One
- ?2003 alan greenwood
- Do not copy this presentation without the express
permission of AWG ENTERPRISES.
2Lets look at several techniques used by authors
in literature
- The following presentation is designed to clarify
study of mood and voice in literature. It also
touches on theme.
3Authors techniques in literature
- Take notes and perform the included exercises for
the best results.
Charles Dickens
4Learn to recognize
- Appreciation of literature by readers includes
recognizing the various methods used by writers
to control prose and poetry through mood and
voice.
5Mood in literature
- Mood is the dominant emotional attitude in a
literary work or in part of a work, for example,
regret, hopefulness, bitterness, happiness, etc.
Whats so funny?
6Mood?
- What MOOD do you think Poe represented in CASK OF
AMONTILLADO? - 1. Cheerful
- 2. Macabre
- 3. Humorous
- 4. Playful
- 5. Revengeful, bitter
- (pick the two which fit and discuss)
7Mood?
- What MOOD do you think Poe represented in CASK OF
AMONTILLADO? - 1. Cheerful
- 2. Macabre
- 3. Humorous
- 4. Playful
- 5. Revengeful, bitter
- (pick the two which fit and discuss)
8MOOD
- MOOD is often used interchangeably with TONE,
although some try to define MOOD as the authors
attitude toward the subject or theme. - Author Subject or
Theme - ex (revenge)
- We will discuss THEME further in a moment.
attitude
9THE CASK OF AMONTILLADO
- What do you think the writer Poes attitude is to
revenge? The speakers? Whats the difference
between the writer and speaker in a work?
10Poes choice of words to suggest mood
- Ex in Cask Poe uses dark, morbid diction choices
to set a macabre, scary mood in the story. (lets
look) - It was about dusk, one evening during the supreme
madness of the carnival season, that I
encountered my friend. He accosted meThe man
wore motley. He had on a a tight fitting
party-striped dress.
11And tone as
- TONE the authors attitude toward her readers.
- (brusque, insinuating, teasing, hateful,
condescending, informing) - Author
-
- Readers
12TONE
- is similar to tone of voice in speech.
In THE GIFT OF THE MAGI, O. Henry uses a
sympathetic tone toward a poor, young couple. In
MEMORY, by Margaret Walker ,Walker uses a
grieving tone.
13Tone in the poem Memory What words reflect
grieving?
- I can remember wind-swept streets of cities
- on cold and blustery nights, on rainy days
- heads under shabby felts and parasols
- and shoulders hunched against a sharp concern
- seeing hurt bewilderment on poor faces
14Tone in Memory what words reflect grieving?
- I can remember wind-swept streets of cities
- on cold and blustery nights, on rainy days
- heads under shabby felts and parasols
- and shoulders hunched against a sharp concern
- seeing hurt bewilderment on poor faces
15Change the tone in Memory insert words to
change to a happy tone.
- I can remember ___________streets of cities
- on ____ and _______________, on _____ days
- heads under __________ felts and parasols
- and shoulders ______ against a _____ concern
- seeing ___________ on ________ faces
16Tone
- Is tone represented by diction (author word
choice)? - (certainly)
17Theme
- Theme the message implied in the work. Theme is
rarely plainly stated by the author but can be
stated in one sentence by the reader. - In THE BIRDS, all the birds in the world turn
against people attacking and killing them. - See if you can state Daphne du Mauriers Theme
in one sentence.
18Review
- Mood the authors attitude toward the subject or
theme. - Tone the authors attitude toward her readers
- (If thats confusing, remember some combine MOOD
TONE. Both can be found through diction and
syntax. - Theme the message implied in the work
19The voice of a writer.
- The authors voice is what attracts readers to
his/her work. - People read Stephen King, Mark Twain, Poe,
Steinbeck, etc. because they love that writers
voice.
20Voice
- Lets imagine a classroom full of children. A
herd of cows runs down the hallway during class.
Now, imagine the teacher wasnt there, and she
picks out several of these students to describe
the incident to her. Will they all describe it
the same way? Of course, not. They will all
describe it in their own voice.
21Different voices
- One little girl, deathly afraid of animals, will
describe it with adjectives of fear. - A well-seasoned farm boy may think its funny and
tell it in a humorous way. - A naïve city girl may add the mystery of
unknown animals. - The class liar may say he tried to catch them.
22Different voices
- In the same way, authors relate stories in
different voices. - Yet.
23Different voices
- Even though authors have different voices, they
can still tell stories with different MOODS. - Stephen King can weave words to create a
cheerful, sad, scary or humorous MOOD. And they
are all in Stephen Kings voice.
24The characters voice
- Lets take it one more step.
- Stay with usthis isnt as complicated if you go
slowly - Stephen King (inside the story) will speak in
the voice of the view-point charactersuch as the
jailer in THE GREEN MILE.
25Voice of character
- King must put words in the characters mouth that
he would truly say. Therefore, word choice and
syntax must be those of a white male, a certain
age, education level, etc. - At the same time, all the characters and story
are still presented in the way Stephen King
writes. They will be totally different than if
Ernest Hemmingway would write them.
26Therefore
- the voice of the writerand withinthe voice the
writer creates for the character within the story.
27Voice
- Voice is complicated. Voice is everything that
makes a writer who he is and how he writes. And
it includes the two subsections we just
discussed - Voice of the writer himself that comes through
in his/her work. - Voice of the particular character that the
writer is inhabiting.
28Voice
- Voice includes diction (word choice), syntax
(sentence structure), tone, imagery, rhythm and
the other more subtle qualities that make each
writer who they are. - Lets look at some examples of voice
29Voice
- Durn that road. And it fixing to rain, too. I can
stand here and same as see it with a
second-sight, a-shutting down behind them like a
wall, shutting down betwixt them and my given
promise. I do the best I can, much as I can get
my mind on anything, but durn them boys. - (Discuss what you think about the voice of this
author.) What is the speaker like?
30Voice
- Durn that road. And it fixing to rain, too. I can
stand here and same as see it with a
second-sight, a-shutting down behind them like a
wall, shutting down betwixt them and my given
promise. I do the best I can, much as I can get
my mind on anything, but durn them boys. - This is William Faulkner taken from AS I LAY
DYING. Faulkner was a Southern writer who was
successful in writing in dialect. The speaker
here is Anse, a character from the story. What do
you think Anse is like? Education? Place of birth?
31Voice
- As we glided nearer, the stranger showed French
colors from his peak and by the eddying cloud of
vulture sea-fowl that circled, and hovered, and
swooped around him , it was plain that the whale
alongside must be what the fishermen called a
blasted whale, that is, a whale that has died
unmolested on the sea, and so floated an
unappropriated corpse. - What is the diction and syntax here like?
32Voice
- As we glided nearer, the stranger showed French
colors from his peak and by the eddying cloud of
vulture sea-fowl that circled, and hovered, and
swooped around him , it was plain that the whale
alongside must be what the fishermen called a
blasted whale, that is, a whale that has died
unmolested on the sea, and so floated an
unappropriated corpse. - This is Herman Melville from the classic novel
Moby Dick. Its all one sentence and the diction
is very high-brow.
33Lets look at a contemporary writer who
considers Faulkner and Melville his influences.
- Id not go behind scripture but it may be that
there has been sinners so notorious evil that the
fires coughed em up again and I could well see in
the long ago how it was little devils with their
pitchforks had traversed that fiery vomit for to
salvage back those souls that had by misadventure
been spewed up from their damnation on the outer
shelves of the world.
34This is Cormack McCarthy from Blood Meridian,
which the respected critic Harold Bloom calls a
Modern Classic.
- Id not go behind scripture but it may be that
there has been sinners so notorious evil that the
fires coughed em up again and I could well see in
the long ago how it was little devils with their
pitchforks had traversed that fiery vomit for to
salvage back those souls that had by misadventure
been spewed up from their damnation on the outer
shelves of the world.
35What is the diction and syntax like?
- Id not go behind scripture but it may be that
there has been sinners so notorious evil that the
fires coughed em up again and I could well see in
the long ago how it was little devils with their
pitchforks had traversed that fiery vomit for to
salvage back those souls that had by misadventure
been spewed up from their damnation on the outer
shelves of the world.
36The Pulitzer Prize winning THE SHIPPING NEWS
Annie Proulx (pronounced Proo)
- Computer screen like boiling milk. The
harbormaster punched keys, the names of ships
leaped in royal blue letters, their tonnages,
ownersbirthdate and social insurance number. The
harbormaster tapped again and a printer hummed,
the paper rolled out into a plastic bin. He tore
off pages, handed them to Quoyle. The shipping
news.
37Annie Proulxs writing contains many sentence
fragments and run-ons.
- Computer screen like boiling milk. The
harbormaster punched keys, the names of ships
leaped in royal blue letters, their tonnages,
ownersbirthdate and social insurance number. The
harbormaster tapped again and a printer hummed,
the paper rolled out into a plastic bin. He tore
off pages, handed them to Quoyle. The shipping
news.
How would those flavor the voice of her writing?
38- The city was their stony-hearted mother, and from
her breast they had drawn a bitter nurture. Born
to brick and asphalt, to crowded tenements and
swarming streets, stunned into sleep as children
beneath the sudden slamming racket of the
elevated trains, taught to fight , to menace, and
to struggle in a world of savage violence and
incessant din, they had had the citys qualities
stamped into their flesh and movements, distilled
through all their tissues, etched with the citys
acid into their tongue and brain and vision.
39Thomas Wolfe
- The city was their stony-hearted mother, and from
her breast they had drawn a bitter nurture. Born
to brick and asphalt, to crowded tenements and
swarming streets, stunned into sleep as children
beneath the sudden slamming racket of the
elevated trains, taught to fight , to menace, and
to struggle in a world of savage violence and
incessant din, they had had the citys qualities
stamped into their flesh and movements, distilled
through all their tissues, etched with the citys
acid into their tongue and brain and vision.
What do you notice about the voice here?
40Thomas Wolfe
- The city was their stony-hearted mother, and from
her breast they had drawn a bitter nurture. Born
to brick and asphalt, to crowded tenements and
swarming streets, stunned into sleep as children
beneath the sudden - Wolfe was heavily edited by his editor. His
manuscripts became huge books. As you see, his
prose was long, drawn out and (some might say)
tedious. He tended many times to tell instead
of show yet hes one of the greats of the
earlier 20th Century. He used many adjectives and
adverbs.Discuss why you think people accepted his
voice?
41Catherine Ryan Hyde Pay It Forward
- There were four of them at the mouth of the
alley, backlit by the streetlight, breathing
clouds of steam into air left cold and clear by
yesterdays rain. They moved up, the ladys sorry
boyfriend in front , with his three stooges
standing just to the rear, smiling in a sickening
chorus. - Gotcha now, trash-talking city boy.
What is Hydes voice like?
42Catherine Ryan Hyde Pay It Forward
- There were four of them at the mouth of the
alley, backlit by the streetlight, breathing
clouds of steam into air left cold and clear by
yesterdays rain. They moved up, the ladys sorry
boyfriend in front , with his three stooges
standing just to the rear, smiling in a sickening
chorus. - Gotcha now, trash-talking city boy.
- One thing this researcher noted is that Hyde uses
many participial phrases in her writing. And some
editors frown on them. Why do you think it works
for her? What are you starting to notice about
voice?
What is Hydes voice like?
43Voice
- Have you noticed that many writers break rules of
what we would call proper grammar and
mechanics - Ex, run-ons, sentence fragments, loooong
sentences, comma usage. - How do these lapses enhance the authors voice?
44Stephen King The Green Mile
- At Johns execution in the electric chair
- The cap hummed. Eight large fingers and two
large thumbs rose from the ends of the chairs
broad oak arms and splayed tensely in ten
different directions, their tips jittering. His
big knees made caged pistoning motions, but the
clamps on his ankles held. Overhead, three of the
hanging lights blew outPow! Pow! Pow!
What diction does KING use for Mood here? How is
KINGS voice different from others youve
discussed?
45Test of Voice
- Now, lets look at another segment from each of
the authors presented - Write down these names and match them with the
upcoming excerpts from them. - Faulkner, Melville, Cormack McCarthy, Stephen
King, Catherine Ryan Hyde, Thomas Wolfe, Annie
Proulx. - Match them with their work. See how you do. It
wont be as simple as syntax or subject matter.
It involves everything that makes an author who
he or she is.
46First author
- The kitchen seemed to Loyal seemed to be falling
outward like a perspective painting, showing the
grain of the ham, the two shades of green of the
ivy wallpaper, the ears of drying popcorn joined
together in a twist of wire over the stove, the
word COMFORT on the oven door, Jewels old purse
nailed to the wall to hold bills and letters
472nd author
- He took off his hat and came slowly forward. The
floorboards creaked under his boots. In his black
suit he stood in the dark glass where the lilies
leaned so palely from their waisted cutglass
vase. Along the cold hallway behind him hung the
portraits of forebears only dimly known to him
all framed in glass and dimly lit above the
narrow wainscoting. He looked down at the
guttered candlestub.
483rd author
- Almost an hour and a half later the door creaked
open, allowing a sliver of light from the
hallway. - Daddy? A thin whisper.
- Im awake, honey.
- I kind of knew you would be.
- She came in and sat in the straight-backed chair
by his bed, and Hayden pulled himself into a
sitting position, his back against the padded
headboard, and turned on the bedside lamp.
494th author
- Isom, in a duck jacket, served them and returned
to the kitchen. - She aint coming to supper? Elnora said.
- Nome, Isom said. Setting yonder by the window,
in the dark. She say she dont want no supper. - Elnora looked at Saddie. What was they doing
last time you went to the library? - Her and Miss Narcissa talking.
505th author
- Now the innumerable archipelago had been
threaded, and he stood, firm-planted, upon the
unknown but waiting continent. - He learned to read almost at once, printing the
shapes of words immediately with his strong
visual memory but it was weeks later before he
learned to write, or even to copy words. The
ragged spume and wrack of fantasy
516th author
- And the knife. He would be carrying a long, sharp
knifemore of a machete, actually, the sort of
knife that could strike off a persons head in a
single sweeping stroke. - And he would be grinning, showing those filed
cannibal teeth.
527th Author
- I sat awhile in perfect silence, rallying my
stunned faculties. Immediately it occurred to me
that my ears had deceived me, or Bartleby had
entirely misunderstood my meaning. I repeated my
request in the clearest tone I could assume but
in quite as clear a one came the previous replay,
I would prefer not to. - Prefer not to, echoed I, rising in high
excitement
53First author Annie Proulx from POSTCARDS
- The kitchen seemed to Loyal seemed to be falling
outward like a perspective painting, showing the
grain of the ham, the two shades of green of the
ivy wallpaper, the ears of drying popcorn joined
together in a twist of wire over the stove, the
word COMFORT on the oven door, Jewels old purse
nailed to the wall to hold bills and letters
542nd author Cormack McCarthy from ALL THE PRETTY
HORSES
- He took off his hat and came slowly forward. The
floorboards creaked under his boots. In his black
suit he stood in the dark glass where the lilies
leaned so palely from their waisted cutglass
vase. Along the cold hallway behind him hung the
portraits of forebears only dimly known to him
all framed in glass and dimly lit above the
narrow wainscoting. He looked down at the
guttered candlestub.
553rd author Catherine Ryan Hyde from Electric God
- Almost an hour and a half later the door creaked
open, allowing a sliver of light from the
hallway. - Daddy? A thin whisper.
- Im awake, honey.
- I kind of knew you would be.
- She came in and sat in the straight-backed chair
by his bed, and Hayden pulled himself into a
sitting position, his back against the padded
headboard, and turned on the bedside lamp.
564th author William Faulkner from Collected Short
Stories
- Isom, in a duck jacket, served them and returned
to the kitchen. - She aint coming to supper? Elnora said.
- Nome, Isom said. Setting yonder by the window,
in the dark. She say she dont want no supper. - Elnora looked at Saddie. What was they doing
last time you went to the library? - Her and Miss Narcissa talking.
575th author Thomas Wolfe from Look Homeward Angel
- Now the innumerable archipelago had been
threaded, and he stood, firm-planted, upon the
unknown but waiting continent. - He learned to read almost at once, printing the
shapes of words immediately with his strong
visual memory but it was weeks later before he
learned to write, or even to copy words. The
ragged spume and wrack of fantasy
586th author Stephen King from Road Virus Held North
- And the knife. He would be carrying a long, sharp
knifemore of a machete, actually, the sort of
knife that could strike off a persons head in a
single sweeping stroke. - And he would be grinning, showing those filed
cannibal teeth.
597th Author Herman Melville from the classic
Bartleby
- I sat awhile in perfect silence, rallying my
stunned faculties. Immediately it occurred to me
that my ears had deceived me, or Bartleby had
entirely misunderstood my meaning. I repeated my
request in the clearest tone I could assume but
in quite as clear a one came the previous replay,
I would prefer not to. - Prefer not to, echoed I, rising in high
excitement
60In Summary
- Mood is the dominant emotional attitude in a
literary work or in part of a work, for example,
regret, hopefulness, bitterness, happiness, etc. - Voice is complicated. Voice is everything that
makes a writer who he is and how he writes. And
it includes two subsections - Voice of the writer himself that comes through
in his/her work. - Voice of the particular character that the
writer is inhabiting.
61THE END
- Exploring Literary Techniques One
- ?2003 alan greenwood
- Do not copy this presentation without the express
permission of AWG ENTERPRISES.
Voice Mood