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Published byLeonard Goodman Modified over 8 years ago
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Tragedy-recounts a casually related series of events in the life of a person of significance, culminating in an unhappy catastrophe (usually death). Tragic Hero-protagonist whose hamartia (error) causes his downfall. Comic Relief-a comical character or moment that brings relief to the darkness of the tragedy Allusion- reference to something the reader is expected to know
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Tragic Flaw-a flaw the tragic hero has, such as excessive pride, that leads to the downfall of the hero. Hamartia- an error the tragic hero makes Tragic Fall- what the tragic hero experiences- it is not pure loss. There is some self- awareness gained. Catharsis- emotional release at the end. When a tragedy is well-performed, it produces a catharsis with the audience at the end.
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Foil Character: a character whose character traits are in stark contrast to another’s. Example: Tybalt and Benvolio from Romeo and Juliet Dramatic Conventions- techniques the author uses within the play. Examples: aside, soliloquy, monologue Soliloquy: a speech that a character gives alone on stage; reveals thoughts and feelings of the character.
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Monologue: a long speech by a character heard by others on stage Aside- a brief, private comment made to the audience or another character Blank Verse-unrhymed iambic pentameter Iambic Pentameter: writing with ten syllables (or five “feet”) which alternate stressed and unstressed syllables
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Plot- sequence of events in a story Exposition- first part of plot- contains setting and conflict(s) Rising action- conflict is developed, and anticipation builds Climax- the peak of action, emotion, and intensity for the reader/audience Falling Action- Conflict(s) begin to clear up Resolution: conflicts are resolved
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Dramatic Irony- when the audience knows something a character does not know Verbal Irony- when one thing is said, but something else is meant Situational Irony- different between what is expected to happen, and what actually happens Theme- the main message the author is trying to get across in the story. Symbolism-when an object represent an idea. Refer to your symbolism packet. Motifs-when an idea, object, word, etc., is repeated throughout a work of literature. Refer to your motif notes.
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Authors/playwrights develop characters through: M- motivation- what the character’s motives are and what motivates them C- what conflicts are present P- perception- how do the characters perceive others, and how do others perceive them? A- actions- what do we learn through the character’s actions? S- speech- what do we learn through the character’s speech? T-thoughts- what do we learn through the character’s speech? A- appearance- what do we learn through the character’s physical appearance
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Indirect Characterization- a writer shows us characters by describing their speech, thoughts, and appearance. This means we, as readers, must infer what kind of people we are meeting in the stories. Direct Characterization- a writer directly tells us what a character is like, or what a person’s motives are. Indirect characterization is more common.
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Man Versus Man (External) Man Versus Society (External) Man Versus Nature (External) Man Versus Self (Internal)
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Omniscient Limited Omniscient First Person Dramatic See handout on P.O.V.
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Review your Archetypes packet and power point in handout’s section
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Comma Rules Underlining Rules Capitalization Rules MLA/Citations- Rules There are handouts for all of these in the handout’s section of my website.
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How to read a dictionary entry
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see poetry terms’ glossary/notes in handout’s section
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