Rayat Shikshan Sanstha’s S. M. Joshi College Hadapsar, Pune-28

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What makes an effective short story?
Advertisements

Elements of Fiction. Introduction In the stud of literature it is important to remember that a story consists of several elements: plot, character, setting,
Short Story Unit Notes.
Short Story Literary Elements
English 2 Short Stories Unit Overview and Literary Terms Definitions.
Short Story Literary Elements. What is a short story? A short story is a brief work of fiction.
Short Story Terms English I. Fiction a story that is not true. a story that is not true.
English 1 Short Stories Literary Terms Definitions.
Literary Terminology. Characterization Protagonist: The main character.
Short Story Terms. Fiction a story that is not true.
Elements of a Short Story
Short Story Notes Elements of Fiction
Elements of a Short Story
Roller Coasting Through a Good Book
Short Story Unit.
Elements of a Short Story
Literary Elements.
Literary Elements.
Short Story Notes Elements of Fiction
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Short Story Notes.
Academia Santa Rosa English Class Fourth Grade And Fifth Grade
What is included in a story?
Elements of Fiction Setting Mood & Tone Character Dialogue & Dialect
Identifying the Elements of Fiction
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Short Story Elements.
Literary Terms Short Stories.
Literary Devices/Story Elements
Short Story Elements.
Short Stories English 9A.
Literary Elements Plot Point of View Mood
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Short Story Unit Literary Terms
Plot Diagram Plot- a sequence of events in a literary work.
Literary Elements Review
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Academia Santa Rosa English Class Sixth Grade
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Academia Santa Rosa English Class Fifth Grade
Rayat Shikshan Sanstha’s S. M. Joshi College Hadapsar, Pune-28
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Short Story
Elements of Fiction.
Short Stories English 9.1.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Short Stories Literary Terms Definitions
Academia Santa Rosa English Class Sixth Grade
Academia Santa Rosa English Class Fourth Grade And Fifth Grade
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Rayat Shikshan Sanstha’s S. M. Joshi College Hadapsar, Pune-28
The Short Story.
Elements of Literature
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
FICTION Genre in which the content is made up; a made up story.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
Elements of a Story What you need to know!.
FICTION Comes from the Latin word fictio meaning “something invented.”
Presentation transcript:

Rayat Shikshan Sanstha’s S. M. Joshi College Hadapsar, Pune-28 Department of English Topic- Short Stories and Literary Terms Definitions Presented By- Prof. Ajit D. Bhosale

Short Stories Literary Terms Definitions English 1 Short Stories Literary Terms Definitions

Why have a whole unit about short stories? Readers need to practice using academic vocabulary in ways that deepen their understanding of how stories work. Emphasizing the connection between reading and writing gives readers the opportunity to apply the literary terminology related to plot structures to short stories that they read together and individually.

But why do I have to learn literary terms? Literature is one of the domains that has its own vocabulary, and we all need to agree on the meaning of terms we use to talk about what we’re reading. Would you want a brain surgeon to operate on you who said, “Oh, I’m going to use this thingamajig to cut a hole in your whatchamacallit.” ?

What does is this quote trying to teach us? “But always he lacked the essential tool without which the workman can never attain true mastery: he did not know the names of any of the parts he was building, and without the name he was artistically incomplete. It was not by accident that doctors and lawyers and butchers invented specific but secret names for the things they did; to possess the name was to know the secret. With correct names one entered into a new world of proficiency, became the member of an arcane brotherhood, a sharer of mysteries, and in the end a performer of merit. Without the names one remained a bumbler or, in the case of boatbuilding, a mere carpenter.” James Michener, Chesapeake

Universal Themes A Universal Theme is a theme common in many books and is understood by a wide audience. Universal themes we will study in this unit: Facing the unknown Being “alone” Conflict and consequences Making hard choices Crossing borders Binding ties

Why do we consider essential questions? Essential questions help readers by  stimulating thought provoking inquiry sparking more questions

Over-riding essential question This is the question you should consider throughout the unit, and in truth, throughout life. Remember EVERY story has more than one side… “How does a story’s perspective change according to who tells it?”

Literary Elements Definitions

Plot: The action in the story.

Character Traits: The means by which an author establishes character Character Traits: The means by which an author establishes character. An author may directly describe the appearance and personality of character or show it through action or dialogue.

Point of view: The view point from which the story is told.

First Person Narrator: First Person Narrator: The point of view of writing which the narrator refers to himself or herself as “I.”

Unreliable Narrator: An unreliable narrator does not always know what is happening in the story, or he or she might be lying or telling us only part of the story.

Third-Person Limited Narrator: The narrator, who plays no part in the story, zooms in on the thoughts and feelings of just one character. With this point of view, we observe the action through the eyes and with the feelings of this one character.

Third-Person Omniscient Narrator: The person telling the story knows everything there is to know about the characters and their problems. This all-knowing narrator can tell us about the past, the present, and the future of all the characters. He or she can even tell us what the characters are thinking. The omniscient narrator is like a god telling the story.

Foreshadowing: A technique in which an author gives clues about something that will happen later in the story.

Theme: The central idea of a work.

Setting: The time and place in which a story occurs.

Irony: Irony occurs when something is said or happens that is not what is meant or expected.

Allegory: A story in which all of the elements represent abstract qualities or ideas.

Satire: A work that makes fun of something or someone with the intent of teaching a lesson or bringing about change.

Protagonist: The main character who faces the central conflict

Antagonist: The person or force working against the main character (protagonist)

Exposition: A literary device used to introduce background information about events, settings, characters etc. to the audience or readers.

Rising action: A worsening of the conflict until the climax of the work.

Climax: The most emotionally tense part of the plot.

Falling action: Events that take place after the climax and lead to the resolution.

Resolution: The result of the conflict.