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Literary Elements Part 1

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Title: Literary Elements Part 1


1
Literary ElementsPart 1
  • Conflict, Plot, Antagonist,
  • and Protagonist,

2
Conflict
  • The problem or struggle in a story that triggers
    the action.
  • There are 5 basic types of conflict.

3
Types of Conflict
4
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5
Internal Conflict
  • Any struggle or problem that is going on within
    the character.
  • Man v. Self

6
External Conflict
  • Any struggle or problem that involves the
    character and any other person, thing or unknown
    force.
  • Man v. Man
  • Man v. Nature
  • Man v. Society
  • Man v. God (Fate)

7
Plot
  • The action or sequence of events in a story.
  • It is usually a series of related events that
    build up on one another as the story develops.

8
Plot Line
9
  • Exposition The background or situation
    surrounding the story.
  • Rising action - the series of struggles that
    builds a story toward a climax.
  • Climax the most intense point in a story.
  • Falling action part of the story that works out
    decisions reached during the climax.
  • Resolution is part of the story in which the
    problem is solved.

10
Antagonist and Protagonist
  • Protagonist - Main character
  • Antagonist - The person or thing working against
    the protagonist

11
Antagonist
Protagonist
12
Literary DevicesPart 2
  • Theme, Irony, Suspense, Allusion
    Characterization, etc.

13
Theme
  • The statement about life the author is trying to
    get across in a story.
  • In most cases the theme will be implied rather
    than directly told.
  • In The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell,
    the theme was the hunter becomes the hunted.

14
Allusion
  • A reference to a literary, mythological, or
    historical person, place, or thing.
  • -- Martin Luther King Jr. alluded to the
    Gettysburg address in starting his I have a
    dream speech by saying Five score years ago.
  • --This referenced Abraham Lincolns Four score
    and seven years ago. (Gettysburg address.)

15
Foreshadowing
  • The use in a literary work of clues that suggest
    events that will happen later in a story.
  • --In Romeo and Juliet, both main characters state
    early on that they would rather die than live
    apart.

16
Epiphany
  • An event in which the essential nature of
    something-a person, situation, object- is
    suddenly understood in a new way.
  • --Think of an ah ha! moment, or visually, a
    light bulb going above your head going on.

17
Detail
  • Facts revealed by the author or that support the
    attitude or tone of the work.
  • --A detail gives more information. For example, a
    detail about Killeen is that it is the location
    of Fort Hood.

18
Archetype
  • A type of character, action, or situation that
    occurs over and over in literature.
  • --An archetype can at times be considered a
    generalization or stereotype. The princess must
    always be rescued by a prince.

19
Motif
  • A main idea in a literary work. A pattern or
    strand of imagery or symbolism in literature.
  • --A motif is different from a theme in that it
    happens over and over in a story.

20
Imagery
  • The words used to represent persons, objects,
    feelings, by appealing to the five senses.
  • --Ex. Her face is a garden.
  • --He laughed like a hyena.

21
Point of view
  • The view or perspective from which a story is
    told.
  • The author is not the one telling the story, but
    the narrator. This can be 1st, 2nd, 3rd person
    point of view.

22
Setting
  • The time and place of the story.
  • --The setting of Batman is Gotham City in the
    future.
  • --The setting can change throughout the story.

23
Irony
  • Is using a word or phrase to mean the exact
    opposite of its literal or normal meaning.
  • There are three kinds of irony

24
  • Dramatic irony, in which the reader or the
    audience sees a characters mistakes, but the
    character does not.
  • Verbal irony, in which the writer says one thing
    and means another The best substitute for
    experience is being thirteen
  • Situational irony, in which there is a great
    difference between the purpose of an action and
    the result.

25
Suspense
  • The uncertainty or anxiety we feel about what is
    going to happen next in a story.

26
The Grip of Suspense
  • When we feel suspense, we feel as if we are
    hanging in midair, like those characters in a
    movie who cling by their fingertips to cliffs,
    their feet kicking out into space. Thats
    suspense and thats why stories like The
    Interlopers by Saki are called cliffhangers.

27
Characterization
  • Is the method an author uses to reveal characters
    and their personalities.
  • There are two types of characterization

28
  • Direct Characterization In which a writer tells
    us directly what a character is like or what
    their motives are.
  • Indirect Characterization In which a writer
    shows us a character but allows us to interpret
    for ourselves the kind of person we are meeting.
  • Speech
  • Appearance
  • Private thoughts
  • Actions and
  • How others in the story feel about them.

29
Symbolism, Tone, and Mood
Literary ElementsPart 3
30
Symbolism
  • Person, place, thing, or event that stands both
    for itself and for something beyond itself.
  • A form of figurative language that is identified
    with something else
  • Public symbols are symbols that are widely
    recognized and accepted

31
Universal Examples
32
Symbolism, A long history
33
Symbolism, Literary Example
34
Symbolism
  • Why would the eagle be chosen as a symbol of the
    United States?
  • What metaphors exist within the symbol of the
    eagle when comparing it to a nation?

35
Symbolism
  • Strength of an eagles wings
  • Sharp eyes
  • Largeness of the bird
  • Why do you think our forefathers chose the eagle
    over Benjamin Franklins proposed turkey?

36
Tone
  • Tone is the attitude that an author takes toward
    the audience, the subject, or the character. Tone
    is conveyed through the author's words and
    details.

37
Mood
  • Mood is the emotions that you feel while you are
    reading. Some literature makes you feel sad,
    others joyful, still others, angry.
  • How does the following passage from O. Henry's
    short story, After Twenty Years, make you feel?

38
  • Literary Elements Part 4
  • Figures of speech

39
Simile
  • A comparison of two different things or ideas
    through the use of the words LIKE or AS.
  • --He was as tall as a tree.
  • --She was sick like a dog.

40
Metaphor
  • A comparison of two unlike things NOT using like
    or as.
  • -- This homework is a breeze.
  • --He showered her with gifts.

41
Personification
  • A personification is when non-human objects are
    given human characteristics.
  • --The sun winked at me.

42
Pun
  • A play on words that are identical or similar in
    sound but mean two completely different things.
  • Shakespeare used puns often in his work.
  • Mercutio Nay, gentle Romeo, we must have you
    dance.
  • Romeo Not I, believe me. You have dancing
    shoes with nimble soles I have a soul of lead so
    stakes me to the ground I cannot move.

43
More examples of puns
  • Every oven in the restaurant was broken. The
    patrons got a raw deal.
  • Did you hear about the guy whose whole left side
    was cut off? He's all right now.

44
Paradox
  • When two elements of a statement contradict one
    another. It seems impossible, but may show hidden
    truths.
  • A teenager told me, All teenagers are liars.

45
Oxymoron
  • A form of paradox that combines a pair of
    opposite terms into one single unusual
    expression.
  • ---Pretty ugly.
  • ----Freezer burn.
  • ----Great depression.

46
Idiom
  • A phrase or expression that has a different
    meaning that its literal meaning.
  • -- Call it a day stop work for the day.
  • "It's late and you've accomplished a lot. Why
    don't you call it a day?

47
Hyperbole
  • An outrageous exaggeration.
  • ---This is the best day ever!!!
  • ---My sister wears so much makeup, she weighs 50
    pounds more after she puts it on.
  • --- My teacher is so old, she taught cave men how
    to start a fire.

48
The End
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