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Literary Elements

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Title: Literary Elements


1
Discovering Literary Elements Devices
Character
Conflict
Theme
Setting
Plot
Point of View
2
You will need to keep these in your binder ALL
YEAR!!! We will be referring back to this list
often.
3
Literary Elements
  • Setting
  • Character
  • Plot
  • Conflict
  • Point of View
  • Theme
  • Tone/Mood

4
Setting
  • The time and location where a story takes place
    (the physical location, year, day, hour, culture)
  • Setting is created through descriptive words,
    sensory images, and details
  • Setting is used to create a mood or atmosphere or
    be the source of conflict or struggle

5
Character
  • People in the story
  • Protagonist main character
  • Antagonist the person against the protagonist
  • Primary (Main)Characters play a major role
    within the story
  • Secondary (Minor) Characters play a minor role
    within the story

6
Characters are
  • Dynamic developing personalities that change,
    for better or worse, by the end of the story
  • Static - do not experience basic character
    changes during the course of the story.
  • Round complex, multidimensional, and developed,
    embodying a number of qualities and traits
  • Flat - stereotypical, have one or two
    characteristics that never change and are
    emphasized

7
Characterization
  • A writer reveals what a character is like and how
    the character changes throughout the story.
  • Two methods of characterization
  • Direct- writer tells what the character is like
  • Indirect- writer shows what a character is like
    by describing what the character looks like, by
    telling what the character says and does, and by
    what other characters say about and do in
    response to the character.
  • Character motivation is what causes the character
    to behave and react to events and other
    characters in the story .

8
Plot
  • Events that take place within a story (what
    happens)
  • Five Plot Steps
  • Introduction (exposition)
  • Rising action
  • Climax
  • Falling Action
  • Resolution (denoument)

9
Plot Components
Climax the turning point, the most intense
momenteither mentally or in action
Rising Action the series of events and conflicts
in the story that lead to the climax
Falling Action all of the action which follows
the climax
Exposition the start of the story, before the
action starts
Resolution the conclusion, the tying together of
all of the threads
10
Plot
11
Plot
12
Conflict
  • Main struggle (problem) of the story, drives the
    plot
  • Two categories of conflict
  • Internal inside the character
  • External protagonist against an outside force
  • Four types of conflict
  • Man vs Man
  • Man vs Environment
  • Man vs Society
  • Man vs Himself

13
Point of View
  • The angle from which the story is told.
  • Narrator the speaker, character, who recounts
    the events of a novel
  • First Person - The story is told by the
    protagonist or one of the characters who
    interacts closely with the protagonist. The
    reader sees the story through this person's eyes
    as he/she experiences it.
  • The unreliable narrator can't be trusted either
    from ignorance or self-interest, this narrator
    speaks with a bias, makes mistakes, or even lies.
  • Second Person - Use of you to address a reader or
    listener directly. It does appear in letters,
    speeches, and step-by-step instructions. 

14
Point of View
  • Third Person Omniscient- The narrator can move
    from character to character, event to event,
    having free access to the thoughts, feelings and
    motivations of the characters and introduces
    information where and when he chooses.
  • Third Person Limited- The narrator tells the
    story primarily from one characters pov and
    cannot move from character to character, event to
    event, or have free access to the thoughts,
    feelings and motivations of the characters.

15
Theme
  • The storys main idea or message it is NOT a
    summary of events
  • There are several universal themes
  • Love conquers all
  • Good vs evil
  • Rags to riches

16
Tone and Mood
  • Tone the writers attitude towards the audience
    or subject
  • Mood (atmosphere) the feeling created in the
    reader by the literary work or passage
  • Remember tone refers to the writer while mood
    refers to the reader

17
Review Bingo
Tone Internal Conflict
1st Pov Theme
2nd Pov
Mood Plot
External Conflict
Draw a 5 by 5 cell table. Write an literary
element in each block. Do not use the same term
twice. It is okay if you do not use all the
terms defined. I will call out the definition
for the terms we have studied. Write a number in
the box of the term called out ( if tone was 1
write a 1 in the box for tone. When you have
five in a row, call bingo. Then show me the
card, if your terms are numbered correctly and in
a row, you have bingo.
18
Literary Devices and Techniques
  • On the EOG, reading passages include questions
    about the authors use of literary techniques and
    figurative language tools authors use to convey
    meaning or to lend depth and richness to their
    writing.
  • Figurative language refers to expressions that
    are not literally true. Examples metaphor,
    simile, personification, hyperbole
  • These devices may be used in fiction, poetry, and
    nonfiction.

19
Surprise Ending
  • Surprise Ending- conclusion that reader does not
    expect
  • Friday The 13th (1980)
  • The Set-Up 22 years after young Jason Voorhees
    died at Camp Crystal Lake, someone is menacing
    the camp councelors. Given that Jasons body was
    never recovered, the hapless teens suspect he's
    returned to take his revenge
  • The Twist It isnt Jason doing the killing, its
    his dear old mum!

20
Foreshadowing
  • Foreshadowing hint of clue about what will
    happen in the story.
  • When looking for foreshadowing
  • Are there phrases about the future?
  • Is there a change happening in the weather, the
    setting, or the mood?
  • Are there objects or scenic elements that suggest
    something happy, sad, dangerous, exciting, etc.?
  • Do characters or the narrator observe something
    in the background that might be a hint about
    something to come later?
  • He had no idea of the disastrous chain of events
    to follow. In this sentence, while the
    protagonist is clueless of further developments,
    the reader learns that something disastrous and
    problematic is about to happen to/for him.

21
Flashback
  • Flashback interrupts the normal sequence of
    events to tell about something that happened in
    the past.
  • In chapter 2 of S.E. Hinton's 'The Outsiders',
    the protagonist/narrator Ponyboy shares
    information about his friend Johnny. One of the
    things he mentions is that Johnny always carries
    around with him a knife. Ponyboy uses a flashback
    to tell the story about the time Johnny was
    beaten up by a rival gang. He includes feelings
    of the people involved, and helps set up the
    background conflict between the two gangs in the
    story. This also gives readers an understanding
    for why Johnny carries around the knife.

22
Flash-forward
  • Flash-forward represents expected or imagined
    events in the future interjected in the main plot
    revealing the important parts of the story that
    are yet to occur.
  • Charles Dickens Christmas Carol. The
    tightfisted and ill-tempered Scrooge is visited
    by the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come who shows
    him his future. Scrooge sees himself dead, and
    people finding comfort and happiness in his
    death. No one mourns his death and the people he
    ruined in his life stole his wealth. He sees Mrs.
    Dilber, his housekeeper, selling his property to
    junkmen and friends. The only one touched by his
    death is a young and poor couple. His only legacy
    is a cheap tombstone in a graveyard. He weeps on
    his own grave and asks the third ghost of
    Christmas to give him a chance to change himself.
    He wakes up and finds that he is back on the
    Christmas morning of the present. Scrooge
    repents and becomes kind and generous.

23
Dialogue
  • Dialogue the conversation between characters

24
Dialect
  • Dialect the language used by the people of a
    specific area, class, or district. The term
    dialect involves the spelling, sounds, grammar
    and pronunciation used by a particular group of
    people and it distinguishes them from other
    people around them.

25
Symbol
  • Symbol A person, a place, an object, or an
    action that stands for something beyond itself.
  • Example A single white dove flew above the
    warring country, lost in its path.

26
IRONY
  • Irony an implied discrepancy between what is
    said and what is meant. Three kinds of irony
  • verbal irony is when an author says one thing and
    means something else
  • dramatic irony is when an audience perceives
    something that a character in the literature does
    not know.
  • irony of situation is a discrepancy between the
    expected result and actual results.

27
IRONY
28
IRONY
29
IRONY
30
IRONY
31
Imagery
  • Imagery Consists of words and phrases that
    appeal to readers five senses.
  • Example Soft snow fall upon the waiting roofs.
    The fluffy flakes create a mound of white powder

32
Alliteration
  • The repetition of an initial consonant sound. As
    J.R.R. Tolkien observed, alliteration "depends
    not on letters but on sounds." Thus the phrase
    know-nothing is alliterative, but climate change
    is not.
  • Alliteration is used to create a melody or mood,
    call attention to specific words, point out
    similarities and contrasts.

33
Assonance
  • The repetition of vowel sounds in a sequence of
    nearby words.
  • "Lose Yourself," Eminem (lyrics bolded to
    indicate the long o rhyme and italicized to
    indicate the short a rhyme)
  • Oh, there goes Rabbit, he chokedHe's so mad, but
    he won't give up that easy, noHe won't have it,
    he knows his whole back's to these ropesIt don't 
    matter, he's dopeHe knows that, but
    he's brokeHe's so stagnant that he knowsWhen
    he goes back to his mobile home,That's when
    it's back to the lab again yo

34
Allusion
  • A reference within a literary work to a
    historical, literary, or biblical character,
    place, or event.
  • Examples that allude to people or events in
    literature 
  • I was surprised his nose was not growing like
    Pinocchios. This refers to the story of
    Pinocchio, where his nose grew whenever he told a
    lie. It is from The Adventures of Pinocchio,
    written by Carlo Collodi. 
  • When she lost her job, she acted like a Scrooge,
    and refused to buy anything that wasnt
    necessary. Scrooge was an extremely stingy
    character from Charles Dickens, A Christmas
    Carol. 
  • Chocolate was her Achilles heel. This means
    that her weakness was her love of chocolate.
    Achilles is a character in Greek mythology who
    was invincible. His mother dipped him in magical
    water when he was a baby, and she held him by the
    heel. The magic protected him all over, except
    for his heel.

35
Simile and Metaphor
  • Simile direct comparison between two unlike
    objects using like or as.
  • Example Paul Bunyan is as big as a mountain.
  • Metaphor a figure of speech in which something
    is described as though it is something else.
    Unlike a simile, a metaphor does not contain like
    or as.
  • Example Paul Bunyan is a mountain of a man.

36
Extended Metaphor
  • The Sea by James ReevesThe sea is a hungry dog,
    Giant and grey.He rolls on the beach all
    day.With his clashing teeth and shaggy jawsHour
    upon hour he gnawsThe rumbling, tumbling stones,
    And 'Bones, bones, bones, bones! 'The giant
    sea-dog moans, Licking his greasy paws.And
    when the night wind roarsAnd the moon rocks in
    the stormy cloud, He bounds to his feet and
    snuffs and sniffs, Shaking his wet sides over
    the cliffs, And howls and hollos long and
    loud.

But on quiet days in May or June, When even the
grasses on the dunePlay no more their reedy
tune, With his head between his pawsHe lies on
the sandy shores, So quiet, so quiet, he
scarcely snores.
37
Extended Metaphor
  • The whole poem is a metaphor. What two things are
    being identified?
  • Giant and grey. What two qualities of the sea
    is James Reeves highlighting?
  • What are some of the qualities the sea and a dog
    have in common?
  • Can you suggest why the poet writes bones four
    times in the one line?
  • Shaking his wet sides over the cliffs What is
    the sea doing?
  • And howls ands hollos long and loud. What
    aspect of the sea is the poet describing?
  • With his head between his paws . What does
    this dog-picture tell us about the sea?
  • In the last two lines of the poem, the poet uses
    quite a number of s sounds. What picture of the
    sea do these sounds give you?

38
Hyperbole
  • A figure of speech in which the truth is
    exaggerated for emphasis or for humorous effect.

39
Idiom
  • The group of words taken together have little or
    nothing to do with the meanings of the words
    taken one by one.
  • You must go beyond the literal meanings of the
    words in the idiom to understand its meaning.
  •  A Dime A Dozen  Anything that is common and
    easy to get.
  • A Leopard Can't Change His Spots  You cannot
    change who you are.Finding Your Feet  To become
    more comfortable in whatever you are doing
  • Cliché - An expression, such as turn over a new
    leaf, that has been used and reused so many
    times that it has lost its expressive power.

40
Idioms
  • See if you can determine what these idioms are
    really saying.
  • He was all ears when his boss called.
  • She was just a chip off the old block.
  • His comments threw a wet blanket on the
    discussion.
  • They were beat after a hard days work.
  • After the manager quit, they were all in the same
    boat.

41
Pun
  • Pun a play on words that uses the similarity in
    sound between two words with distinctly different
    meanings.

42
Oxymoron
  • Figure of speech that combines two normally
    contradictory terms.
  • Examples icy hot jumbo shrimp bittersweet

43
Onomatopoeia
  • The use of words whose sounds suggests their
    meaning.
  • Example The boom of thunder woke me from my nap.

44
Onomatopoeia
  • ONOMATOTODAY
  • In the morning
  • yawn, stretch
  • to the bathroom
  • scratch, blink
  • in the shower
  • scrub, splash
  • to the closet
  • whisk, rustle
  • down the hall
  • thump, creak
  • in the kitchen
  • clank, clink

to the car click, slam on the road honk,
screech at the office tick, ring out to
lunch munch, slurp return home thug, moan on to
bed shuffle, snore Cathy Christensen
45
Personification
  • The giving of human qualities to an animal,
    object, or idea.
  • Example Winter trees are starving, lacking
    leaves of spring.

46
Repetition ( Refrain)
  • A technique in which a sound, word, phrase, or
    line is repeated for effect or emphasis.
  • Example
  • In my sleep,
  • I dream
  • In my sleep,
  • I believe
  • In my sleep,
  • I mourn

47
The End
48
  • I wish I could say all of this is mine... But
    its not. It is a conglomeration of all the
    different notes I have picked up over the years.
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