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Narrative Fiction: EOC Vocabulary
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1. Narrative Fiction Writing that tells a story. Writing drawn from the author’s imagination (not real). Two types: Short Story and the Novel
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2. Short Story A short work of Narrative Fiction.
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3. The Novel A long work of Narrative Fiction. Novels are longer than Short Stories.
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4. Prose The ordinary form of everyday writing. Essays, Short Stories, and Novels are Prose. Poetry, Drama, and Songs are not Prose.
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5. Character Persons, animals, or things in a story. There are many different classifications of Characters and characterizations.
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Main Character The important character in the story.
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Secondary Character Characters other than the Main Character. (ALL other characters).
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Indirect Characterization We learn about the character from what they do.
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Direct Characterization The Author tells us what kind of person the character is.
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Flat/Static Characters No Change (the character remains the same throughout the story)
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Round/Dynamic Characters Changes (the character changes or develops as the story progresses)
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6. Plot The sequence of events in a story. What happens in the story? A short 3-4 sentence summary that tells about the characters and the conflicts they are in. Plot: Exposition, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, Resolution
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7. Setting The time and place of the action of the story. The year, time and place, season, weather, the daily life of the characters.
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8. Conflict A struggle between two opposing forces or characters in the story. The fight or problem in the story. (often more than one)
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Four types of Conflict Person v. Person Person v. Nature Person v. Society Person v. Themselves
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9. Theme Central Idea or basic meaning of a literary work. An underlying idea that has a lot to do with the story. The point or moral of the story. What is this story saying about people, or life, or the world? (one sentence)
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10. Climax The point of greatest interest or suspense in the story. The “turning point”: when the crisis is resolved or the decision is made. The major (most important) part of the story.
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11. Point-of-View The Vantage Point from which a story is told. 1 st Person 2 nd Person 3 rd Person
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1 st Person Point-of-View Story is told by a character. Uses “I”, “me”, and “we”.
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2 nd Person Point-of-View Gives instruction Uses “you”
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3 rd Person Point-of-View Story is told by a Narrator. Uses “he”, “she”, and “it”. 3 rd Person Limited – Narrator only knows some info, or what one person thinks. 3 rd Person Omniscient – Narrator knows everything that is happening.
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12. Protagonist The Main Character in the story. Usually the Hero.
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13. Antagonist The Person or Thing in conflict with the Protagonist. Usually the Villain.
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14. Mood The feeling created in the reader by the story. The emotional response you feel from reading the story.
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15. Tone The attitude the Author takes toward his subject. The words and details used in the story show the author’s tone. One word description: Humorous or Serious, Formal or Informal
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16. Irony (Situational) A difference between what is expected and what really happens. A difference between what is said and what is really meant.
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Dramatic Irony* When the reader knows something that the Character does not know.
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17. Foreshadowing When things happen in the story that give hints or clues about what will happen later. When the Characters say things that let you know what might happen later.
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18. Symbolism When an element of the story represents or stands for something else. A Rose=Love A Skull=Death Spring=Youth Winter=Old Age
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19. Flashback When a scene in a story represents something that happened before.
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