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Fiction

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Fiction Literary Terms – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fiction


1
Fiction
  • Literary Terms

2
Short Story
  • A brief work of fiction. It resembles the longer
    novel, but generally has a simpler plot and
    setting. Character tends to be revealed at a
    crucial moment rather than developing through
    many incidents.

3
Novel
  • A longer work of fiction. The plot explores
    characters in conflict just like a short story.
    However, a novel is typically much longer than a
    short story and may have one or more subplots,
    several themes, and more complex characters.

4
Character
  • Protagonist - the most important character in a
    story (the one that readers would like to see
    succeed!)
  • Antagonist the character who opposes the main
    character, or the protagonist.

5
Character continued
  • Round characters show many traits faults as
    well as virtues.
  • Flat characters demonstrate a single trait.
  • Dynamic characters develop and grow during the
    course of the story.
  • Static characters do not change.

6
Diction
  • Word choice. To discuss a writers diction is to
    consider the vocabulary used, the appropriateness
    of the words, and the vividness of the language.

7
Syntax
  • The grammatical arrangement of words within a
    sentence. Writers often manipulate syntax,
    changing conventional word order, to place
    certain emphasis on particular words.
  • Example "Sense sure you have,/ Else could you
    not have motion" (Shakespeare Hamlet 3.4.71-2)

8
Frame Narrative
  • A narrative structure containing or connecting a
    series of otherwise unrelated tales. A story
    within a story.

9
In medias res
  • Technical term for the epic convention of
    beginning "in the middle of things," rather than
    at the very start of the story.
  • Example many episodes of The Walking Dead

10
Foreshadowing
  • hints and/or clues as to what is going to happen
    next

11
Flashback
  • A device that allows the writer to present events
    that happened before the time of the current
    narration or the current events in the fiction.
    Flashback is useful for exposition, to fill in
    the reader about a character or place, or about
    the background to a conflict.

12
Idiom
  • An expression that means something other than the
    literal meanings of its individual words. Ex
    working the graveyard shift

13
Irony
  • The general term for literary techniques that
    portray differences between appearance and
    reality, expectation and result, or meaning and
    intention.

14
Irony continued
  • In verbal irony, words are used to suggest the
    opposite of what is meant.
  • Ex No one would argue that there could be
    anything more important in choosing a college
    than how close it is to the beach."

15
Even More Irony
  • In dramatic irony, there is a contradiction
    between what a character thinks and what the
    reader or audience knows to be true.
  • Ex When Romeo finds Juliet in a drugged sleep,
    he assumes her to be dead and kills himself. Upon
    awakening to find her dead lover beside her,
    Juliet then kills herself.

16
Yep. Still More Irony!
  • In irony of situation, an event occurs that
    directly contradicts the expectations of the
    characters, the readers, or the audience.
  • Ex a professional pickpocket had his own pocket
    picked just as he was in the act of picking
    someone else's pocket.

17
Point of View
  • The perspective from which a story is told. If
    the narrator is part of the action, the story is
    told from first-person point of view. In a story
    told in third- person, the narrator is someone
    outside the action.

18
Point of View continued
  • An omniscient third-person narrator is
    all-knowing. A limited third-person narrator
    only tells the thoughts and feelings of one
    character.

19
Prose
  • The ordinary form of written language. Most
    writing that is not poetry, drama, or song is
    considered prose.

20
Theme
  • A central message or insight revealed through a
    literary work. The theme may be stated directly
    or implied. Some works may have multiple themes,
    while others will have no theme at all.

21
Universal Theme
  • A message about life that can be understood by
    most cultures.

22
Tone
  • The writers attitude towards his or her audience
    and subject. The tone can often be described by
    a single adjective, such as formal or informal,
    serious or playful.

23
Mood
  • Sometimes called atmosphere, this is the feeling
    created in a reader by a literary work.

24
Assignment
  • Choose two works (film or book).
  • Identify characters from each that are dynamic,
    static, round, and flat. (4 characters from each
    work).
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