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Short Story / Novel Literary Terms

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Title: Short Story / Novel Literary Terms


1
Short Story / NovelLiterary Terms
2
Fiction
  • Fiction is prose writing that tells about
    imaginary characters and events.
  • Some fiction is entirely made-up, while other
    fiction is based on real events and/or people

3
Setting
  • The setting of the literary work is the time and
    place of the action.
  • Time can include not only the historical
    periodpast, present, or futurebut also a
    specific year, season, or time of day.
  • Placethough usually physicalmay also involve
    the social, economic, or cultural environment of
    the story

4
What do you find in the setting of a short story?
iRespond Question
Multiple Choice
F
A.) resolution of the conflict
B.) time and place
C.) the highest point of a story
D.)
E.)
5
Protagonist
  • The protagonist is the main character in a
    literary work.
  • He/she is NOT necessarily the good guy, just
    the main character

6
Antagonist
  • An antagonist is a character or force in conflict
    with the main character
  • This is NOT necessarily the bad guy, just the
    person or thing that is working against the main
    character

7
Conflict
  • A conflict is a struggle between opposing
    forces.
  • There are two types of conflict
  • INTERNAL -Conflict that occurs inside the
    character -man Vs. self
  • EXTERNAL
  • Conflict that occurs outside of the
    character -man Vs. man -man Vs. nature -man
    Vs. society -man Vs. fate

8
Symbol
  • Something that has a literal meaning, but also
    stands for or represents an abstract idea.
  • Example The American Flag on a literal
    level, it is just a flag, a piece of cloth.
    However, it also stands for this particular
    county, for freedom, etc.

9
Denotation Vs. Connotation
  • Denotation The dictionary meaning of a word,
    independent of other associations that the word
    may have
  • Connotation The set of ideas associated with a
    word in addition to the words actual, explicit
    meaning

10
Irony
  • The difference between appearance and reality,
    expectation and result.
  • There are THREE kinds of Irony-Verbal Irony a
    word or phrase used to suggest the opposite of
    its actual meaning-Dramatic Irony When there
    is a contradiction between what a character
    thinks and what the readers know is true

11
Irony (continued)
  • -Situational Irony When an event directly
    contradicts expectations of the reader or of the
    characters

12
Dialogue
  • A dialogue is a conversation between characters.
  • It is often used to reveal things about a
    characters thoughts, motivations, and
    personality to the reader, and to advance the
    action of the plot.
  • Example
  • After walking into the kitchen, Susie cried,
    Mom, how could you eat the last cupcake?!
  • Mom replied, I was hungry, and you werent here.
    It was delicious, my dear!

13
Diction
  • Word choice, including vocabulary used, word
    appropriateness, and vividness of language

14
Mood
  • The feeling created in the reader by a literary
    work
  • Tone
  • The attitude toward the subject that an author
    conveys in a piece of writing

15
Purpose
  • The authors reason for writing a specific piece
    (Examples To entertain, to inform, or to
    persuade the reader)

16
Foreshadowing
  • Clues in a literary work that suggest events that
    have yet to occur
  • This literary device helps to create suspense,
    keeping readers wondering about what will happen
    next.

17
Generalization
  • A broad principle that is supported by evidence
    or particulars
    Evidence
  • Particulars, or details, that lead to
    generalizations

Evidence Evidence Evidence Evidence
GENERALIZATION (BIG PICTURE!!!)
18
Theme
  • The central message or insight into life revealed
    through a literary work
  • This is the deeper meaning, the main
    lesson/message/moral that the author hopes the
    reader will understand at the end of the story

19
Simile
  • A comparison between two unlike things using
    like or as.
  • Similes are used to make descriptions of objects
    or people more powerful.
  • Example
  • Without a simile It was dark outside.
  • With a simile The night was as dark as thick,
    black velvet.

20
Allusion
  • When one literary work references a well-known
    person, place, event, work of art, or another
    literary work to make a point.
  • Example In Taylor Swifts song Love Story,
    she alludes to the play Romeo and Juliet and
    the novel The Scarlet Letter to enhance her
    message.

21
Metaphor
  • A comparison between two unlike things, without
    using the words like or as.
  • Instead, one thing is spoken of as though it is
    something else completely.
  • Example (from the Langston Hughes poem
    Dreams)if dreams dieLife is a
    broken-winged birdThat cannot fly

22
Personification
  • A type of figurative language, where a non-human
    object is given human characteristics
  • Examples
  • -The desk coughed and grunted as I shoved it
    across the old wooden floor.
  • -The tea kettle whistled once the water was
    boiling.

23
Imagery
  • The descriptive or figurative language used in
    literature to create word pictures for the
    reader.
  • These word pictures/images, are created by
    details of sight, sound, taste, touch, smell, or
    movement.

24
Point of View
  • The perspective or angle from which a story is
    being told
  • There are several types
  • First-Person-Point-of-View When the narrator
    telling the story is one of the characters, and
    tells the story as a personal account
  • Third-Person-Point-of-View When the narrator is
    not one of the characters (has no name, and does
    not participate in any of the action of the plot)

25
Point of View (continued)
  • There are also two types of Third-Person-Point-of-
    View
  • Third-Limited-Point-of-View When the narrator
    sees the world through one characters eyes and
    reveals only that characters thoughts
  • Third-Omniscient-Point-of-View When the narrator
    sees into the minds of all the characters

26
Dynamic Character
  • A character that develops and changes through the
    course of a story
  • Example Ebenezer Scrooge? at the beginning of A
    Christmas Carol, he is a mean, lonely man that
    is only interested in money. By the end of the
    story, he is generous, and interested in the
    true spirit of Christmas.

27
Static Character
  • A character that does not change or develop
    through the course of the story
  • Example
  • Wile E. Coyote

28
Characterization
  • The way a writer reveals a characters
    personality and traits
  • There are two methods
  • Direct Characterization The author directly
    states a characters personality and/or physical
    traits
  • Indirect Characterization Uses a characters
    thoughts, actions, and feelings, to suggest the
    characters traits.

29
Narrator
  • The person from whose perspective a story is told

30
Round Character
  • A character that exhibits many traits, faults as
    well as virtues
  • Flat Character
  • A character who seems to have only a single
    personality trait

31
Fantasy
  • A work of fiction with characters, places, and
    events that could not really exist

32
Plot
  • The sequence of events that make up a story,
    usually centering around a main conflict

33
The Five Stages of Plot
34
Exposition
  • The first stage of plot!
  • In the Exposition, the scene is set
  • this part of the story introduces the characters,
    tells the reader the setting, and provides all of
    the necessary background information

35
Rising Action
  • The second stage of plot!
  • This is where the action usually begins. In the
    Rising Action, the conflict is introduced (either
    between characters, or with an outside force).
    This conflict will build up pressure until the
    Climax

36
Climax
  • The climax is the highest point of conflict in
    the story!!
  • Generally, this is the point after which
    everything is different. All of the pressure or
    events of the Rising Action have stacked up to
    this moment, when something must change

37
Falling Action
  • This stage begins the downward slope? the
    conflict lessens, and the plot moves towards
    closure

38
Resolution/Denouement
  • In the final stage of plot, the conflict
    concludes, and loose ends are tied up.
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