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LITERATURE TERMS Fiction Unit
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Characterization The use of literary techniques to create a character. Writers use three major techniques to create characters: direct description portrayal of behavior representation of internal state
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Direct Description The narrator or another character comments on the character’s appearance, habits, clothing, etc. “Miss Watson, a tolerable slim old maid, with goggles on…”
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Portrayal of Behavior The actions and speech of the character lets us draw conclusions about him “Tom said he slipped Jim's hat off of his head and hung it on a limb right over him, and Jim stirred a little, but he didn't wake.”
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Representation of Internal State When the writer directly reveals a character’s private thoughts and emotions “I used to be scared of him all the time, he tanned me so much. I reckoned I was scared now, too…”
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Setting The time, place, and circumstances in which the events of a story take place. For example: December 7 th, 1941 Hawaii The attack on Pearl Harbor Setting can mirror the plot or set a contrast
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Theme The overall message the writer wants the reader to understand. Theme cannot be stated in a single word; it must be a complete thought. The theme is not “love”; the theme is “love cannot exist without a knowledge of hate.”
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Plot The sequence of events in a story
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Mood The atmosphere created by the author through the use of descriptive language Common words that reflect mood: creepy, peaceful, depressing, angry, unhappy, nervous, etc.
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Tone How the author feels about the subject
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Point of View The perspective from which the story is told Includes first, second, and third person Point of view is NOT a character’s or narrator’s opinion!
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Style Distinct/unique manner a writer arranges words and figurative language to achieve particular effects. Word choice, length of sentences, structure, tone, irony
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Summarization Summarization is the restating of the main ideas/events of the text in your own words and being as brief and succinct as possible.
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Inferences…Conclusions Judgments based on reasoning rather than on a direct or explicit statements. Understanding gained by “reading between the lines.”
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Irony Contradiction, last thing expected Verbal: says one thing means another Dramatic: difference between character’s words/actions and what audience knows to be true Situational: expectations aren’t what actually happens due to forces beyond human control.
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Symbolism The use of symbols to signify ideas and qualities by giving them symbolic meanings that are different from their literal sense
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