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Title: LITERARY DEVICES


1
LITERARY DEVICES
  • P-S
  • PARABLE - SYNESTHESIA

2
PARABLE
  • A story or short narrative designed to reveal
    allegorically some religious principle, moral
    lesson, or general truth. Rather than using
    abstract discussion, a parable always teaches by
    comparison with real or literal
    occurrences--especially "homey" everyday
    occurrences a wide number of people can relate
    to.
  • Examples "The Prodigal Son" and "The Good
    Samaritan."

3
PARADOX
  • A statement that seems to contradict itself, but
    reveals a deeper truth through its contradiction.
  • Examples
  • "where there is no law, there is no freedom
  • (John Locke)
  • "Cowards die many times before their deaths
    (Shakespeares Julius Caesar)
  • "And all men kill the thing they love.
  • (Oscar Wilde's "Ballad of Reading Gaol)

4
PARALLELLISM
  • When the writer establishes similar patterns of
    grammatical structure and length for the purpose
    of expressing ideas that are related or equal in
    importance.
  • Example
  • "King Alfred tried to make the law clear,
    precise, and equitable.
  • AS OPPOSED TO
  • "King Alfred tried to make clear laws that had
    precision and were equitable."

5
PARODY
  • A mocking imitation of another work or type of
    literature. Parody imitates the serious manner
    and characteristic features of a particular
    literary work in order to make fun of those same
    features.
  • Examples
  • Shakespeares Sonnet 130 (My mistress eyes
    are nothing like the sun)
  • Chaucers Wife of Baths Tale

6
PASTORAL
  • A poem presenting shepherds in a simple, rural
    existence. It usually idealized shepherds' lives
    in order to create an image of peaceful and
    uncorrupted existence. More generally, pastoral
    describes the simplicity, charm, and serenity
    attributed to country life, or any literary
    convention that places kindly, rural people in
    nature-centered activities. Popular with
    Renaissance writers.
  • Examples
  • The Passionate Shepherd to His Love by
    Christopher Marlowe

7
PERSONAL ESSAY
  • A type of informal essay. A personal essay
    allows the writer to express individual
    viewpoints on subjects by reflecting on events or
    incidents in his or her own life.
  • Examples
  • A Hanging by George Orwell
  • A Laws of Life essay, in which you express your
    personal belief in a driving value of your life

8
PERSONIFICATION
  • A figure of speech in which animals, ideas, and
    inanimate objects are given human character,
    traits, abilities, or reactions/emotions.
  • Examples
  • Here rests his head upon the lap of earth
  • Loves not Times fool, though rosy lips and
    cheeks/Within his bending sickles compass come
  • hardship groaned around my heart
  • Hunger tore at my sea-weary soul

9
PERSUASION
  • A technique used by writers and speakers to
    convince an audience to adopt a particular
    opinion, perform an action, or both. Persuasion
    often makes use of logical, emotional, and
    ethical appeal.
  • Examples
  • Winston Churchills speeches
  • A letter you write to your parents to convince
    them you should be allowed to go to prom

10
PERSUASIVE ESSAY
  • A piece of writing in which the writer attempts
    to convince readers to adopt a particular view or
    perform a specific action. Persuasive essays
    often present a series of facts, reasons, or
    examples to support the position statement.
  • Examples
  • Of Studies by Sir Francis Bacon
  • Of Marriage and Single Life by Sir Francis
    Bacon

11
PERSUASIVE SPEECH
  • A speech given to convince an audience to adopt a
    particular opinion, perform an action, or both.
    Persuasive speeches often makes use of logical,
    emotional, and ethical appeal and can sometimes
    use loaded languagelanguage that brings up
    strong connotations for the audience.
  • Examples
  • Churchills speeches
  • Hitlers speeches

12
PETRARCHAN (ITALIAN) SONNET
  • The Petrarchan sonnet has an eight line stanza
    (called an octave) followed by a six line stanza
    (called a sestet). The octave has two quatrains
    rhyming abba, abba, the first of which presents
    the theme, the second further develops it.
  • In the sestet, the first three lines reflect on
    or exemplify the theme, while the last three
    bring the poem to a unified end. The sestet may
    be arranged cdecde, cdcdcd, or cdedce.
  • Examples All of Francesco Petrarchs sonnets

13
PLOT
  • The sequence of actions and events in a work of
    fiction. Most literary critics would agree that
    plot cannot exist without conflict.
  • Example

14
POETRY
  • A genre of literature in which the arrangement of
    lines on the page create a form which, when
    joined with content, suggest meaning beyond the
    literal meanings of the words.
  • Examples
  • Poetic forms Ballad, elegy, epic, haiku,
    narrative, sonnet, etc.

15
POINT OF VIEW
  • The way a story gets told and who tells it the
    method of narrating a short story, novel,
    narrative poem, or work of nonfiction.
  • Examples
  • first-person
  • third-person omniscient
  • third-person limited

16
PRIMARY SOURCE
  • A book, document, or person that provides
    original, first-hand information about a topic.
  • Examples
  • Letters, wills, diaries, recordings, government
    records.
  • The Paston Letters
  • Shakespeares baptism record

17
PROP
  • (Abbreviation of property)
  • Any physical object that is used in a stage
    production.
  • Examples
  • In Macbeth Macbeth and Macduffs swords,
    Banquos torch, the candle carried by Lady
    Macbeth

18
PROSE
  • Any material that is not written in a regular
    meter like poetry. Genres such as short stories,
    novels, letters, essays, and treatises are
    typically written in prose.
  • Examples
  • Samuel Johnsons essays Elizabeth Gaskells
    fiction Mary Shelleys gothic novel T.C.
    Boyles short stories

19
PROTAGONIST
  • The main character in a work, on whom the author
    focuses most of the narrative attention
  • Examples
  • Macbeth
  • Federigo
  • Beowulf
  • Victor Frankenstein

20
QUATRAIN
  • A quatrain is a stanza of four lines, often
    rhyming in an ABAB pattern.
  • Examples
  • Gather ye rosebuds while ye may
  • Old time is still a-flying
  • And this same flower that smiles today
  • Tomorrow will be dying
  • Robert Herricks
  • To the Virgins to Make Much of Time

21
REALISM
  • Any artistic or literary portrayal of life in a
    faithful, accurate manner, unclouded by false
    ideals, literary conventions, or misplaced
    aesthetic glorification and beautification of the
    world. It is a theory or tendency in writing to
    depict events in human life in a matter-of-fact,
    straightforward manner.
  • Realism also refers to a literary movement in
    America, Europe, and England that developed in
    the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
  • Examples
  • Charles Dickens portrayal of orphan life in
    Oliver Twist
  • James Joyces short story Araby based on real
    life experiences of his childhood in Dublin,
    Ireland

22
REPETITION
  • A technique in which a sound, word, line or
    phrase is repeated for emphasis or effect.
  • Examples
  • Little Lamb, who made thee? Dost thou know who
    made thee?
  • Little Lamb, I'll tell thee, Little Lamb, I'll
    tell thee.
  • William Blakes The Lamb
  • The Tyger by William Blake
  • Sonnet 43 by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

23
RESOLUTION
  • The outcome or result of a complex situation or
    sequence of events an aftermath or resolution
    that usually occurs near the final stages of the
    plot the denouement
  • Examples
  • Victors death and the Creatures discussion with
    Robert Walton in Frankenstein Macbeths death
    and Malcolms speech to restore order in the
    kingdom

24
RHYME
  • A matching similarity of sounds in two or more
    words, especially when their accented vowels and
    all succeeding consonants are identical.
  • Examples
  • skating/dating
  • emotion/demotion
  • fascinate/deracinate
  • plain/stain

25
RHYME SCHEME
  • The pattern of rhyme. The traditional way to mark
    these patterns of rhyme is to assign a letter of
    the alphabet to each rhyming sound at the end of
    each line.
  • Examples
  • The glories of our blood and state
    ---------------AAre shadows, not substantial
    things -------------BThere is no armor against
    fate -------------------A Death lays his icy
    hand on kings ----------------BScepter and
    crown --------------------------------CMust
    tumble down, --------------------------------CAnd
    in the dust be equal made ------------------D
    With the poor crooked scythe and spade. ------D
  • From "Of Death"
  • By James Shirley

26
RHYTHM
  • The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables
    in poetry.
  • This pattern is usually notated by marking the
    meter of the line putting a diagonal line ( )
    or a macron ( - ) over stressed syllables. A
    small curving loop ( ? ) or a small x ( x ) goes
    over the unstressed syllables. This process is
    called scansion.
  • Examples
  • "The cúrfew tólls the knéll of párting dáy."

27
RISING ACTION
  • The action in a play or work of fiction that
    happens just before the climax. During the rising
    action, complications arise for the main
    characters that make the conflict more difficult
    to resolve.
  • Examples
  • Portion B-C

28
ROMANCE
  • Any imaginative adventure concerned with noble
    heroes, gallant love, a chivalric code of honor,
    daring deeds, and supernatural events often
    contain faraway settings and idealize heroes.
  • writers.
  • Examples
  • Le Morte dArthur by Thomas Mallory
  • A Knights Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer

29
ROMANTICISM
  • A literary movement of the 19th century that
    emphasized nature, an idealized past,
    imagination, and the celebration of the
    individual. Romanticism rejected the earlier
    philosophy of the Enlighten-ment, which stressed
    that logic and reason were the best response
    humans had in the face of cruelty. Instead,
    Romantics emphasized emotion and natural passions
    as a means of knowing and a reliable guide to
    ethics and living.
  • Examples
  • Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth and Samuel
    Taylor Coleridge

30
SARCASM
  • A type of verbal irony saying one thing that
    sounds complimentary but meaning the statement as
    an insult or criticism
  • Examples
  • You have clearly proved that ignorance,
    idleness, and vice are the proper ingredients for
    qualifying a legislator.
  • From Gullivers Travels
  • By Jonathan Swift

31
SATIRE
  • When a writer uses humor to point out the flaws
    of society by ridiculing a person, idea, custom,
    behavior, institution, or class in society.
  • Examples
  • Chaucers mocking of the clergy in the medieval
    church
  • Dave Barrys Year in Review that provides a
    humorous overview of the past year

32
SCRIPTURE
  • Literature that is considered sacred and is used
    in religious rituals of worship, celebration, and
    mourning.
  • Examples
  • The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want
  • Psalm 23
  • To every thing there is a season, and a time to
    every purpose under the heaven
  • Ecclesiastes

33
SESTET
  • Any six-line stanza or a six-line unit of poetry
    the last part of an Italian or Petrarchan sonnet,
    consisting of six lines that rhyme with a varying
    pattern.
  • Examples
  • Thy soul was like a Star, and dwelt apart
  • Thou hadst a voice whose sound was like the sea
    Pure as the naked heavens, majestic, free,
  • So didst thou travel on life's common way,
  • In cheerful godliness and yet thy heart
  • The lowliest duties on herself did lay.
  • Wordsworth

34
SETTING
  • The general locale, historical time, and social
    circumstances in which the action of a fictional
    or dramatic work occurs the particular physical
    location in which it takes place
  • Examples
  • London, Scrooges past, present, and future in A
    Christmas Carol the arctic, Geneva Switzerland,
    and Victors lab in Frankenstein Sweden,
    Denmark, and Herot in Beowulf Scotland during
    the Anglo-Saxon and early Medieval period in
    Macbeth

35
SHAKESPEAREAN (ENGLISH) SONNET
  • A poem made up of 14 lines in the form of three
    quatrains and a final couplet. Its rhyme scheme
    is abab, cdcd, efef, gg
  • Example
  • That time of year thou mayst in me behold,
  • When yellow leaves, or none, or few do hang
  • Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
  • Bare ruined choirs, where late the sweet birds
    sang
  • In me thou seest the twilight of such day,
  • As after sunset fadeth in the west,
  • Which by and by black night doth take away,
  • Death's second self that seals up all in rest.
  • In me thou seest the glowing of such fire,
  • That on the ashes of his youth doth lie,
  • As the deathbed, whereon it must expire,
  • Consumed by that which it was nourished by.
  • This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more
    strong,
  • To love that well, which thou must leave ere
    long.

36
SHORT STORY
  • A brief prose tale that can be read in one
    sitting usually plot functions as the driving
    force.
  • Examples
  • The Lottery by Shirley Jackson
  • The Rocking-Horse Winner by D.H. Lawrence
  • The Machine Stops by E.M. Forster

37
SIMILE
  • A type of figurative language that makes a
    comparison between two things, using the words
    like or as.
  • Examples
  • The worlds honor ages and shrinks, bent like
    the men who mold it
  • as a peacock with many feathersfolds its
    feathers, so she subsided and shut herself as she
    sank down in the leather armchair

38
SITUATIONAL IRONY
  • When a character or the reader expects one thing
    to happen but something else happens instead
  • Examples
  • In O Henry's The Gift of the Magi, the wife
    cuts off and sells her beautiful long hair to a
    wig-maker for money to buy a chain for her
    husbands heirloom pocket watch. Meanwhile, the
    husband sells his heirloom watch to buy his wife
    pretty combs for her long and beautiful hair.

39
SLANT RHYME
  • Also called inexact rhyme or approximate rhyme,
    slant rhymes are rhymes created out of words with
    similar but not identical sounds. In most of
    these instances, either the vowel segments are
    different while the consonants are identical, or
    vice versa.
  • Examples
  • Heart-smitten with emotion I sink downMy heart
    recovering with covered eyesWherever I had
    looked I had looked uponMy permanent or
    impermanent images

40
SOLILOQUY
  • A monologue spoken by an actor at a point in the
    play when the character believes himself to be
    alone. The soliloquy reveals a character's
    innermost thoughts, including his feelings, state
    of mind, motives or intentions.
  • Examples
  • To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,Creeps
    in this petty pace from day to day,To the last
    syllable of recorded timeAnd all our yesterdays
    have lighted foolsThe way to dusty death. Out,
    out, brief candle!Life's but a walking shadow, a
    poor player,That struts and frets his hour upon
    the stage,And then is heard no more. It is a
    taleTold by an idiot, full of sound and
    fury,Signifying nothing.

41
SONNET
  • A poem of fourteen lines, usually in iambic
    pentameter, with rhymes arranged according to
    certain definite patterns. It usually expresses a
    single, complete idea or thought in the first 8
    lines with a reversal, twist, or change of
    direction in the concluding 6 lines or in the
    remaining couplet.
  • Examples
  • The poetic works of Shakespeare, Petrarch, and
    Spenser

42
SOUND DEVICES
  • Also known as musical devices, sound devices are
    elements of literature and poetry that emphasize
    sound, often for a specific effect or
    emphasis.Examples
  • The most common sound devices are assonance,
    consonance, alliteration, rhyme and onomatopoeia
  • fastened those claws / In his fists till they
    cracked, clutched Grendel / Closer
    (alliteration, onomatopoeia, consonance)

43
SPEAKER
  • The narrative or voice in a poem (such as a
    sonnet, ode, or lyric) that speaks of his or her
    situation or feelings. It is a convention in
    poetry that the speaker is not the same
    individual as the historical author of the poem.
    The speaker/voice may be distant and objective,
    or intimate and involved with the subject of the
    poem.
  • Examples
  • The speaker of The Wifes Lament is
    passionately emotional about the loss of a
    husband the speaker of Tennysons Lady of
    Shalott seems to be neutral and objective

44
SPENSERIAN STANZA
  • A nine-line stanza rhyming in an ababbcbcc
    pattern in which the first eight lines are
    pentameter and the last line is an alexandrine,
    or six-foot line. The name spenserian comes from
    the form's most famous user, Edmund Spenser, who
    used it in The Fairie Queene
  • Examples
  • ababbcbcc

45
SPRUNG RHYTHM
  • Also called "accentual rhythm," sprung rhythm is
    a term invented by the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins
    to describe the metrical system in which the
    major stresses are "sprung" from each line of
    poetry. The accent falls on the first syllable of
    every foot and a varying number of unaccented
    syllables following the accented one, but all
    feet last an equal amount of time when being
    pronounced.
  • Examples
  • Landscape plotted and pieced fold, fallow, and
    ploughAnd all trades, their gear and tackle and
    trim.
  • From Hopkins Pied Beauty

46
STAGE DIRECTIONS
  • Sometimes abbreviated "s.d.," the term in drama
    refers to part of the printed text in a play that
    is not actually spoken by actors on stage, but
    which instead indicates actions or activity for
    the actors to engage in. In Shakespeare's day,
    these instructions were often given in Latin.
  • Examples
  • Exit / Exeunt

47
STANZA
  • An arrangement of lines of verse in a pattern
    usually repeated throughout the poem. Typically,
    each stanza has a fixed number of verses or
    lines, a prevailing meter, and a consistent rhyme
    scheme. A stanza may be a subdivision of a poem,
    or it may constitute the entire poem stave.
  • Examples
  • A quatrain, an octave, or a sestet, especially
    within a longer poetic work

48
STEREOTYPE
  • A character who is so ordinary or unoriginal that
    the character seems like an oversimplified
    representation of a type, gender, class,
    religious group, or occupation a stock character
  • Examples
  • the absent-minded professor the merciless
    villain the rejected lover

49
STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS
  • Writing in which a character's perceptions,
    thoughts, and memories are presented in an
    apparently random form, without regard for
    logical sequence, chronology, or syntax. Often
    such writing makes no distinction between various
    levels of reality--such as dreams, memories,
    imaginative thoughts or real sensory perception.
  • Examples
  • James Joyce and Virginia Wolff are known for
    their stream of consciousness style of writing

50
STRUCTURE
  • The way in which the parts of a work of
    literature are put together. The structure may be
    made up of paragraphs, chapters, acts, scenes,
    lines, and stanzas, depending upon the genre
    form
  • Examples
  • The numbering of T.S. Eliots sections to his
    poem Preludes, which allows him to shift time
    and place

51
STYLE
  • The author's words and the characteristic way
    that writer uses language to achieve certain
    effects
  • Examples
  • Emily Dickinsons distinctive use of the em-dash
    (long dash) at the end of her poetic lines
    Charles Dickens distinctively long descriptions
    of various scenes throughout his novels.

52
SUPERNATURAL ELEMENTS
  • Traits that make up a supernatural tale ghostly
    beings, power, or phenomena that go beyond the
    realm of reality
  • Examples
  • The Green Knight who picks up his head after it
    is chopped off the Ghost of Christmas Future who
    takes Scrooge on a journey to his potential
    future

53
SUPERNATURAL TALE
  • A story that goes beyond the bounds of reality,
    known forces, or laws of nature.
  • Examples
  • A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, with the
    emphasis that Dickens wanted to create a ghost
    story
  • Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, with the emphasis
    that Shelley wanted to create a blood-curdling
    tale about a monster

54
SURPRISE ENDING
  • A totally unexpected and unprepared-for turn of
    events, one which alters the action in a
    narrative and occurs at the end of the story
  • Examples
  • In Sixth Sense, when Bruce Willis finds out that
    he is one of the dead people that Haley Joel
    Osmend sees In The Others, when Nicole Kidman
    finds out that the strange noises and incidents
    have not been caused by ghosts, but by the live
    people living in the same house she and her
    children occupy in the spiritual realm.

55
SUSPENSE
  • The tension or excitement readers feel as they
    are drawn into a story and become increasingly
    eager to know the outcome of the plot. Suspense
    is created when a writer purposes leaves readers
    uncertain or apprehensive about what will happen.
  • Examples
  • The feeling that the Creatures threat was not
    meant for Victor a scene in a movie when the
    audience is uncertain about whether a train will
    go off the end of a bridge or not

56
SYMBOL
  • A word, place, character, or object that means
    something beyond what it is on a literal level
  • Examples
  • The falcon in Federigos Falcon, with the idea
    that it comes to represent the love between Mona
    and Federigo Herot in Beowulf, with the idea
    that it means heart and stands for the
    brotherhood and loyalty of the warriors

57
SYNECDOCHE
  • A figure of speech in which the name of a part is
    used to refer to a whole
  • Examples
  • The use of wheels to refer to a car
  • Eliots use of muddy feet to refer to
    early-morning crowds of people heading to work
  • The use of Twenty eyes watched our every move
    to mean that ten people were watching

58
SYNESTHESIA
  • The use of one sensory image to describe another
  • Examples
  • the cold smell of potato mold
  • a heavy silence fell across the crowd
  • the scent of roses rang clearly throughout the
    garden
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