Literary Terms Narrative Writing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What makes an effective short story?
Advertisements

Short Story Terms.
Literary Devices Ms. Miller.
Literary Terms for Study
Literary Terms Flashcards
“The Most Dangerous Game” Literary Terms
Literary Term Notes Setting Where and when the story takes place: Time of day, place, season, time period, etc.
Sherman Alexie So, who is this author anyways?.
Literary Terms.  Fiction: A type of writing based on imagination.  Non-Fiction: A type of writing that is based on facts.
LITERARY TERMS AKA: The-Most-Important-Notes- You’ll-Take-This-Year-So-Copy-Every- Word-Down.
Literary Terms Vocabulary. Author’s Purpose Reason for writing the story. (to inform, to entertain, to persuade, etc.)
Short Story Terms What is your favorite part of a story? Is it the setting? The conflict? The characters? Why?
LITERARY ELEMENT & THEIR DEFINITIONS. Antagonist.
Elements of Literature. PLOT Exposition: the characters and setting are introduced. Rising Action: the conflict is revealed. Climax: the highest point.
A Guide to Interpreting Short Stories
Short Story Terms. What is a Short Story? A short story is : a brief work of fiction where, usually, the main character faces a conflict that is worked.
Short Story Terms. What is a Short Story? A short story is : a brief work of fiction where, usually, the main character faces a conflict that is worked.
The Odyssey Literary Terms. Simile comparison between two unlike things using like or as.
Sherman Alexie So, who is this author anyways?. Who is he? Sherman Alexie is a Native American poet, novelist, performer and filmmaker. Some of his literary.
Short Story Terms. Fiction a story that is not true.
Short Stories Elements of a Short Story. What is a Short Story? A brief, fictional (not true), narrative type of prose that involves conflict, characters,
` Characterization The manner in which an author presents a character by using the character’s actions, dialogue, description, or how other characters.
Sherman Alexie.
Short Story Notes Elements of Fiction
Short Story Unit L. Templeton.
Short Stories.
Short Story Notes Protagonist – The main character who experiences some kind of conflict. The protagonist is often, but not always a good guy. Antagonist.
Elements of Literature
Know them, use them, LOVE them!
District Assessment #1 REVIEW!!
Short Story Notes Elements of Fiction
Elements of Fiction Flashback Foreshadowing Characterization Conflict.
What we know so far in English!
Literary Terms Quick Study Review
Literary Terms Quick Study Review
What is in a Short Story?.
Literary Terms.
Literary Terms.
Mrs. McKee 9th Grade College Prep
SHORT STORY ELEMENTS.
Literary Terms Freshman.
Literary Elements English 1
Short Story Terms.
Short Story Elements.
Literary Elements & Key Terms
Short Story Elements.
The Short Story.
Welcome to Jeopardy.
Elements of the Short Story
Plot Diagram Plot- a sequence of events in a literary work.
Literary Terminology English II Outcome A.
Multicultural Literature
Short Story Elements Terminology.
Irony Foreshadowing Flashback Dialect Oxymoron Alliteration
Short Story Terms.
Short Story Terms.
Literary Terms Guided Notes 1.
Literary Terms.
Mrs. McKee 9th Grade College Prep
Short Story Terms.
Short Story Terms.
LAP 1: Literary Elements
Short Story Terms.
Short Story Terms Review- take notes!.
Short Story Terms.
English 10 Literary Terms.
Short Story Terms.
Glossary of Literary Terms
Presentation transcript:

Literary Terms Narrative Writing

Characterization Direct characterization: when the author tells us personality traits of the character Example: Mrs. Whalley had always been very shy; she had a hard time getting to know people because she didn’t engage in conversation very easily. Indirect characterization: when the author uses actions to make the reader infer aspects of the character’s personality When Mrs. Whalley entered the crowded room filled with strangers, her immediate instinct was to turn and run. Instead, she sat at the empty table and avoided making eye contact.

Figurative Language Metaphor: making a comparison between two seemingly unlike things without using the terms “like” or “as” This room is an oven! Her hair was golden silk streaming in the afternoon breeze. Simile: making a comparison between two seemingly unlike things using “like” or “as” His blue eyes sparkled like diamonds. She danced like she was trying to stomp on rabid squirrels.

Figurative Language Imagery: Using detail and calling on the five senses (sight, smell, sound, taste, touch) to create a picture of your story in the reader’s mind. Flashback: An interruption of a work's chronology to describe or present an incident that occurred prior to the main time frame of a work's action Foreshadowing: Giving a hint or clue about actions that will occur later in the narrative Setting: Focuses on the time period, climate, location, and cultural environment of a place

Conflict External Conflicts: problems that a character has with other people or things Man vs. man: fights, verbal or physical Man vs. nature: storms, disease, old age Man vs. society: stigmas, prejudice, majority opinion Internal Conflict: problems a character has within oneself Man vs. self: How to handle a situation, accepting who one is, coping with judgement, guilt, etc.

Irony Dramatic Irony: when the audience knows something that not all characters are aware of In Romeo and Juliet, we learn in the Prologue that Romeo and Juliet are fated to die but they are unaware. Situational Irony: when the outcome of a situation is not what we expected to happen, typically after the writing has lead us to believe something else will occur Verbal Irony: when a character says something but means something else, can often be sarcasm “Oh man, another homework assignment? I’m so excited.”

Native American Culture Watch the following clips that focus on Tamara and Thomas, who live in New Mexico on the Navajo reservation As we watch, observe as much as you can about what the culture and life is like on these reservations and write down as many details as possible on lined paper

Discussion Questions How would you describe life on the reservation where Thomas and Tamara live? What information in the documentary led you to these conclusions? What did Thomas gain from the ceremony convened by his family to "send him off on his way to become a young man"? How might such a meeting connect past and present for Thomas? What internal conflicts do Thomas and Tamara seem to deal with regarding Native American and American culture?

The lone ranger and tonto fistfight Author: Sherman Alexie Grew up in Spokane, Washington on the Spokane/Coeur D’Alene reservation Went to high school off the reservation Went to college and began writing poetry and fiction Began to abuse alcohol In 1990, his work was published in magazine and he quit drinking Information from the Poetry Foundation http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/sherman-alexie

Sherman Alexie’s writing According to the Poetry Foundation, “in his short-story and poetry collections, Alexie illuminates the despair, poverty, and alcoholism that often shape the lives of Native Americans living on reservations. His poems, novels and short stories evoke sadness and indignation yet also leave readers with a sense of respect and compassion for characters who are in seemingly hopeless situations. Involved with crime, alcohol, or drugs, Alexie’s protagonists struggle to survive the constant battering of their minds, bodies, and spirits by white American society and their own self-hatred and sense of powerlessness.”