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Literary Terms for Multiple Choice Test

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Literary Terms for Multiple Choice Test Mr. Ward 10 Honors LITERARY TIME PERIOD Puritan - Pre-revolutionary period (1690-1765) Ex. Sinners in the hands of an angry ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Literary Terms for Multiple Choice Test


1
Literary Termsfor Multiple Choice Test
  • Mr. Ward
  • 10 Honors

2
LITERARY TIME PERIOD
3
Puritan - Pre-revolutionary period (1690-1765)
  • Ex. Sinners in the hands of an angry god.
  • Focus God, Sinning, Freedom of Religion

4
Revolutionary/Age of Reason1750-1800
  • Patriotism Grows
  • Tells readers to encourage Revolutionary War
    Support
  • Think using Reasoning Skills
  • Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas
    Paine, Patrick Henry
  • The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution
  • Focus government-freedom, ethics/morals, science

5
Romanticism (1800-1860)
  • Value feeling and intuition over reasoning
  • Journey away from Corruption of Civilization
  • Emily Dickinson
  • Walt Whitman

6
Transcendentalism (1840-1860)
  • Ex. H.D. Thoreau, R.W. Emerson
  • Focus Nature, Self-Reliance, Non-Conformity

7
Realism (1855-1900)
  • Ex. E. Wharton, W. Carther, E.A. Robinson
  • Focus
  • Social Realism aims to change a specific problem
  • Act on Basic Instincts

8
The Moderns (1900-1950)
  • In Pursuit of The American Dream
  • Admiration for America as land of Eden
  • Importance of the Individual
  • F Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby.
  • John Steinbecks Of Mice and Men
  • Universal Themes that everyone understands

9
Harlem Renaissance (1920s)Parallel to Modernism
  • Allusions to African-American Spirituals
  • Uses structure of blues songs in poetry
  • Superficial Stereotypes Revealed to be complex
    characters
  • Gave birth to Gospel Music
  • Langston Hughes
  • Their Eyes Were Watching God

10
Postmodernism1950s to Present
  • Arthur Miller Death of a Salesman
  • Usually humorless
  • Insists that values are not permanent but only
    local or historical
  • Feminist and Social Issues

11
Contemporary1970s - Present
  • Harper Lees To Kill A Mockingbird
  • Concern with connections between people
  • Emotion-provoking
  • Sandra Cisneros The House on Mango Street

12
Character Characterization
13
Character
  • Person, particularly as depicted in a dramatic or
    literary work.
  • Non-Fiction Character
  • A character in a work of prose or poetry based
    upon a real person, past or present.
  • Fictional Character
  • A character who only exists within a work of
    prose or poetry
  • Moral Character
  • A character who exists to serve and/or carry out
    an authors moral may be fiction or non-fiction

14
Protagonist
  • A protagonist is considered to be the main
    character or lead figure in a novel, play, story,
    or poem.  It may also be referred to as the
    "hero" of a work.
  • Does not have to be good.

15
Antagonist
  • a character in a story or poem who deceives,
    frustrates, or works again the main character, or
    protagonist, in some way. The antagonist doesnt
    necessarily have to be an person. The
    Protagonists Foil

16
Archetype
  • A term used to describe universal symbols that
    evoke deep and sometimes unconscious responses in
    a reader. In literature, characters, images, and
    themes that symbolically embody universal
    meanings and basic human experiences, regardless
    of when or where they live, are considered
    archetypes. Common literary archetypes include
    stories of quests, initiations, scapegoats,
    descents to the underworld, and ascents to
    heaven.

17
Flat vs. Round Character
  • Flat Dramatizes a single idea that is repeated
  • Round Complex actions are from many aspects of
    his/her personality

18
Static vs. Dynamic
  • Static Unchangeable and predictable
  • Dynamic Altered by the events he/she experiences

19
FOIL Character
  • Characters that contrast in terms of values,
    traits, and goals.

20
Characterization
  • 1. DIRECT CHARACTERIZATION - the writer makes
    direct statements about a character's personality
    and tells what the character is like.2.
    INDIRECT CHARACTERIZATION - the writer reveals
    information about a character and his personality
    through that character's thoughts, words, and
    actions, along with how other characters respond
    to that character, including what they think and
    say about him.

21
POINT OF VIEW
22
Point of View
  • The way in which a story is told.
  • First person point of view
  • The main character of the story narrates
  • Third Person Point of View
  • Third person objective
  • Tells the story in the style of a camera-lens
    can only tell the action in an objective style
  • Third person limited
  • Knows all about one character
  • Third person omniscient
  • Knows all about EVERY character

23
Types of Text
24
Historical Fiction
  • A story which is based on historical events
    parts of the details may be altered to fit the
    needs of the story
  • Setting is the most important element in
    Historical Fiction

25
Gothic Fiction
  • A story that combines dark elements with romance
    focuses on the horrific side of romance combines
    horror and romance
  • ATMOSPHERE is the most important element in
    Gothic Fiction
  • Tone Atmosphere Mood

26
Bildungsroman
  • A novel of education
  • Main character / protagonist
  • Self development
  • Maturation
  • Growth and development
  • Some form of loss / discontent that jars him /
    her away from family
  • Long, gradual process
  • Clashes between his / her needs, views, desires,
    and judgments and unbending social order
  • Eventual blending of protagonist with society

27
Parable
  • A relatively short story that teaches a moral, or
    lesson, about how to lead a good life.
  • The most famous parables are those told by Jesus
    in the bible

28
Allegory
  • A story that has two meanings one literal and
    one symbolic
  • Characters, as an allegory, can represent
    abstract social values/sins or morals. i.e.
    Greed, Lust, Pride

29
Drama
  • A work of fiction meant to be performed on stage.

30
IRONY
31
Irony
  • 1. verbal irony is when an author says one thing
    and means something else.
  • 2. dramatic irony is when an audience perceives
    something that a character in the story does not.
  • 3. situational irony is a discrepancy between the
    expected result and actual results.
  • 4. character irony a characters name,
    appearance, actions may be different than what we
    expect

32
Conflict
33
Conflict
  • the tension or problem in the story a struggle
    between opposing forces
  • Terms Associated With Conflict
  • 1.      central conflict  the dominant or most
    important conflict in the story.
  • 2.      external conflict  the problem or
    struggle that exists between the main character
    and an outside force. (ex  person vs. person,
    person vs. society, person vs. nature, person vs.
    the supernatural, person vs. technology, etc.)
  • 3.      internal conflict  the problem or
    struggle that takes place in the main characters
    mind (person vs. self).

34
Dramatic Terms
35
Dramatic Conventions
  • Dramatic Conventions are the specific actions or
    techniques the actor, writer or director has
    employed to create a desired dramatic
    effect/style.
  • A dramatic convention is a set of rules which
    both the audience and actors are familiar with
    and which act as a useful way of quickly
    signifying the nature of the action or of a
    character.

36
Dramatic Speeches
  • Monologue A long uninterrupted speech by one
    character spoken to or in the presence of other
    characters
  • Soliloquy A long uninterrupted speech by one
    character while he or she is alone on stage
    reveals his or her inner thoughts
  • Aside A brief spoken speech spoken directly to
    the audience or a specific character that is
    unheard by others

37
Catastrophe
  • catastrophe (literature), in literature, the
    final action that completes the unraveling of the
    plot in a play, especially in a tragedy.

38
Hamartia
  • Hamartia is a concept used by Aristotle to
    describe tragedy. Hamartia leads to the fall of a
    noble man caused by some excess or mistake in
    behavior, not because of a willful violation of
    the gods' laws. Hamartia is related to hubris,
    which was also more an action than attitude.

39
Hubris
  • Hubris, means extreme haughtiness, pride or
    arrogance. Hubris often indicates a loss of
    contact with reality and an overestimation of
    one's own competence or capabilities, especially
    when the person exhibiting it is in a position of
    power.

40
Elements of Language
41
Types of Language
  • Figurative Language
  • Figurative language uses "figures of speech" - a
    way of saying something other than the literal
    meaning of the words.
  • Concrete Language
  • Concrete terms refer to objects or events that
    are available to the senses.
  • Abstract Language
  • A term used to describe language that deals with
    generalities and intangible concepts.
  • Ex. Words like happiness, despair, hope, beauty,
    and evil.
  • Fluff Language
  • Words that do not anything substantial to a piece
    of writing like, a lot, very, stuff

42
Dialect
  • a variety of a language that is a characteristic
    of a particular group of the language's
    speakers.1 The term is applied most often to
    regional speech patterns, but a dialect may also
    be defined by other factors, such as social
    class.

43
Syntax
  • The rules or patterns of grammatically structured
    sentences.

44
Idiom
  • An expression particular to a certain language
    that means something different from the literal
    definition of its parts.
  • Falling in love.
  • I lost my head.

45
Simile
  • A comparison between two things that are
    basically dissimilar using like or as to make
    the comparison.
  • My papas hair is like a broom.

46
Metaphor
  • A comparison between two unlike things in which
    one thing becomes another
  • But my mothers hair is the warm smell of bread
    before you bake it.

47
Personification
  • The act of giving human qualities to something
    that is not human
  • My hair is lazy.

48
Hyperbole
  • Exaggeration for EffectIm so hungry I could
    eat a horse.

49
Understatement
  • a statement that is restrained in ironic contrast
    to what might have been said the opposite of
    hyperbole. Understatement is usually used for a
    humorous effect

50
Paradox
  • Paradox reveals a kind of truth which at first
    seems contradictory. Two opposing ideas.
  • Discrimination is a Virtue.
  • ..."War is Peace" "Freedom is Slavery"
    "Ignorance is strength

51
Tone
  • Tone is the attitude a writer takes towards a
    subject or character serious, humorous,
    sarcastic, ironic, satirical, tongue-in-cheek,
    solemn, objective. Similar to Mood

52
Mood
  • Mood is the term used to describe the feeling of
    a piece of literature. When you read a novel and
    get a feeling of suspense or mystery, this is the
    mood you are uncovering.

53
Voice
  • The writers awareness to create (using elements
    of style, tone, syntax, unity, coherence) a clear
    and distinct personality of writer.

54
Style
  • The distinctive way in which a writer uses
    language, from how he/she puts sentences together
    to his/her choice of vocabulary and use of
    literary devices

55
Atmosphere
  • The mood or feeling created in a piece of
    writing. Atmosphere helps to create mood for the
    reader.
  • Atmosphere is one of the most important literary
    elements in Gothic Fiction.
  • Tone Atmosphere MOOD
  • A storys atmosphere might be peaceful, festive,
    menacing, melancholy, and so on. Elie Wiesels
    Night, for example, creates an atmosphere of
    terror and sadness.

56
Alliteration
  • The repetition of similar consonant sounds within
    a phrase or sentence
  • It is the smell when she makes room for you on
    her side of the bed still warm with her skin.

57
Onomatopoeia
  • The use of a word whose sound imitates or
    suggests its meaning.
  • Ex. Buzz

58
Diction
  • An author's choice of words. Since words have
    specific meanings, and since one's choice of
    words can affect feelings, a writer's choice of
    words can have great impact in a literary work.
    The writer, therefore, must choose his words
    carefully.

59
Connotation
  • The emotional connection associated with a word

60
Denotation
  • The definition of a word as it would be seen in a
    dictionary.

61
Storytelling Techniques
62
Flashback
  • Flashback is action that interrupts to show an
    event that happened at an earlier time which is
    necessary to better understanding.

63
Foreshadowing
  • Foreshadowing is the use of hints or clues to
    suggest what will happen later in literature.
  • Foreshadowing, here, just means hinting at things
    to come. Its well known that beginners tend to
    be scared of their own foreshadows. And the truth
    is they are sometimes right. If, by
    foreshadowing, you mean that the narrator or
    someone summarizes what will happenespecially,
    just before it happensthen suspense gets
    punctured. Or, rather the reader, who loves grade
    A suspense"whats going to happen?"will have to
    settle for grade B suspense"how will it happen?"

64
Theme
  • Themes are the fundamental and often universal
    ideas explored in a literary work. Theme is the
    general idea or insight about life that a writer
    wishes to express. All of the elements of
    literary terms contribute to theme. A simple
    theme can often be stated in a single sentence

65
Symbolism
  • Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or
    colors used to represent abstract ideas or
    concepts.
  • the bird of night (raven is a symbol of death)

66
Motif
  • Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or
    literary devices that can help to develop and
    inform the texts major themes.
  • A motif differs from a theme in that a theme is
    an idea set forth by a text, where a motif is a
    recurring element which symbolizes that idea. The
    motif can also be more like the central idea
    behind the theme, such as courage or loyalty.

67
Suspense
  • a feeling of growing tension and excitement. 
    Writers create suspense by raising questions in
    readers minds about what might happen.

68
Catharsis
  • Meaning "purgation," catharsis describes the
    release of the emotions of pity and fear by the
    audience at the end of a tragedy.

69
Sensory Details/Imagery
  • Images and/or details that emphasize our senses
    to recreate a scene for the reader
  • Imagery is used in literature to refer to
    descriptive language that evokes sensory
    experience. It makes you think about what the
    word means and you can se a flash of a picture in
    your mind.

70
Ambiguity
  • A statement which can contain two or more
    meanings.

71
Analogy
  • a similarity between like features of two things,
    on which a comparison may be based the analogy
    between the heart and a pump.
  • 2. similarity or comparability I see no analogy
    between your problem and mine.

72
Anecdote
  • a brief account of an interesting incident or
    event that usually is intended to entertain or to
    make a point

73
Allusion
  • Allusion is a brief reference to a person, event,
    or place, real or fictitious, or to a work of
    art. Casual reference to a famous historical or
    literary figure or event.An allusion may be
    drawn from history, geography, literature, or
    religion.

74
Setting
  • Setting is determining time and place in fiction
  • In Historical Fiction, Setting is the most
    important literary element.

75
Aphorism
  • Aphorism is a brief saying embodying a moral, a
    concise statement of a principle or precept given
    in pointed words

76
Stock Situation
  • frequently recurring sequence of action in a
    genre, e.g., rags-to-riches, boy-meets-girl, the
    eternal triangle, the innocent proves himself or
    herself.

77
Stock Response
  • a habitual or automatic response based on the
    reader's beliefs or feelings, rather than on the
    work itself. A moralistic person might be shocked
    by any sexual scene and condemn a book or movie
    as dirty a sentimentalist is automatically moved
    by any love story, regardless of the quality of
    the writing or the acting someone requiring
    excitement may enjoy any violent story or movie,
    regardless of how mindless, unmotivated or brutal
    the violence is.

78
Grammatical Terms
79
Fragment
  • A sentence fragment is a group of words which
    sounds like a sentence but does not express a
    complete thought. Sometimes it has a subject or
    verb missing. Sometimes it is a phrase or
    subordinate clause instead of a complete
    sentence.

80
Modifier
  • Modifiers describe a word or make the meaning of
    the word more specific. They are said to modify
    the word.
  • In English there are two parts of speech which
    are modifiers--adjectives and adverbs.
  • Adjectives modify nouns and pronouns. Adverbs
    modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.

81
Coordinating Conjunction
  • Connects two independent sentences by using what
    is commonly referred as FANBOYS
  • For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So

82
Subordinating Conjunctions
  • Words that make one independent sentence
    dependent
  • I.e. since, when, until, because, although

83
Transition Words
  • Words that help to move from one thought to
    another semi-colon is placed before the word,
    and a comma is placed after
  • Furthermore, However, On the other hand

84
Comma Splice
  • Improperly seperating two independent sentences
    by use of just a comma

85
Run On Sentence
  • Joining two independent sentences with no
    punctuation

86
Parallel Structure
  • repetition of sentences using the same structure.
    This line from Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg
    Address provides an example The world will
    little not nor long remember what we say here,
    but it can never forget what they did here.

87
Appositives
  • An appositive is a noun, noun phrase, or noun
    clause which follows a noun or pronoun and
    renames or describes the noun or pronoun. A
    simple appositive is an epithet like Alexander
    the Great. Appositives are often set off by
    commas.
  • Example We visited the home of Harriet Beecher
    Stowe, the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin.

88
Types of Sentences
  • 1. A simple sentence may have a simple subject or
    a compound subject. It may have a simple
    predicate or a compound predicate. But a simple
    sentence has ONLY ONE INDEPENDENT CLAUSE, and it
    has no dependent clauses. A simple sentence may
    contain one more more phrases.
  • 2. A compound sentence consists of two
    independent clauses. The clauses must be joined
    by a comma, followed by a coordinating
    conjunction (FANBOY) or separated with a
    semi-colon.
  • 3. A complex sentence contains one independent
    clause (in italics) and one or more dependent
    clauses (in boldface).
  • 4. A compound-complex sentence contains two or
    more independent clauses (in italics) and one or
    more dependent clauses (in boldface).
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