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Published byValerie Paul Modified over 6 years ago
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LITERARY TERMS A REVIEW OF TERMS WE WILL EXAMINE AS WE READ FICTION AND LITERARY NON-FICTION
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THEME a central message or insight into life the “big idea”
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GENRE a type of literature (fiction, non-fiction, poetry, drama, etc.)
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the sequence of events of a story
PLOT the sequence of events of a story (what happens)
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explanation of background, setting, and characters
EXPOSITION explanation of background, setting, and characters
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not always human (remember “Wall-E”?)
CHARACTER a person in a story not always human (remember “Wall-E”?)
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PROTAGONIST the main character
The person dealing with the problem in the story
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a character who works AGAINST the protagonist
ANTAGONIST a character who works AGAINST the protagonist
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time and place where the story takes place
SETTING time and place where the story takes place
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the “problem” that the protagonist must solve (or not)
CONFLICT the “problem” that the protagonist must solve (or not)
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EXTERNAL CONFLICT the problem comes from outside the protagonist (man vs man, man vs nature, Batman vs Joker)
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the problem occurs inside a character’s mind; a decision must be made
INTERNAL CONFLICT the problem occurs inside a character’s mind; a decision must be made
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steps the protagonist takes to deal with the conflict
RISING ACTION steps the protagonist takes to deal with the conflict
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CLIMAX the “high point” of the story; the point where the problem/conflict is solved
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FALLING ACTION events between the climax and the end of the story; what happens after the problem is solved
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RESOLUTION/DENOUMENT
The end of the story; what the reader is left with
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the viewpoint of the narrator (whoever is telling the story)
POINT-OF-VIEW the viewpoint of the narrator (whoever is telling the story)
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FIRST-PERSON POINT-OF-VIEW
The narrator is a character in the story (“I saw this; I did this; she did that to me.”)
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THIRD-PERSON POINT-OF-VIEW
The narrator is not a character in the story. (He did this; she did that; this happened to them.)
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MOOD the feeling the story gives to the READER. If the story cheers you up, it has a light, or happy mood. If the story is a downer, it has a dark mood.
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the attitude of the narrator/author
TONE the attitude of the narrator/author
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a direct comparison using “like” or “as” (like a diamond in the sky)
SIMILE a direct comparison using “like” or “as” (like a diamond in the sky)
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METAPHOR a comparison that does NOT use “like” or “as” (the stars were diamonds in the sky)
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PERSONIFICATON Gives human characteristics to non-human things/ideas (the wind whispered a lullaby)
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ALLUSION reference to another piece of literature or historical event
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HYPERBOLE a gross exaggeration used for effect (the baseball player hit that ball a mile!)
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IRONY A contrast between appearance and reality—usually one in which reality is the opposite of what it seems
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SITUATIONAL IRONY Where things turn out differently than what the reader is lead to expect
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Where the reader knows something a character does not
DRAMATIC IRONY Where the reader knows something a character does not
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Where someone knowingly says one thing and really means another
VERBAL IRONY Where someone knowingly says one thing and really means another Sarcasm is a good example of this, but is not the only one
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