AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

47
AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms

Transcript of AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Page 1: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

AMERICAN LITERATURE

50 Common Literary Terms

Page 2: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Fiction

A work that is not based on reality

Page 3: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Drama

A play

Page 4: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Poetry

The writings of a poet that are considered beautiful and graceful; usually written in a specific format

Page 5: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Non-fiction

A story or writing that is based on truth and reality

Page 6: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Characterization

How the character is described in terms of its personality, physical appearance and character.

Page 7: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

dialogue

Conversation between two or more characters

Page 8: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

monologue

A speech, usually very long, that is give by one character only in the presence of other people

Page 9: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Direct characterization

When the author describes the character for the audience through vivid detail and description

Page 10: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Indirect characterization

When the reader determines what the character is like through inferences made in the reading

Page 11: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Setting

When and where the story takes place

Page 12: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Chronological order

When a written work is ordered from the oldest to the most recent; ordered by date

Page 13: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Epistolary Form

When a work is written in the form of letters

Page 14: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Frame Narrative

A story that is written within another story; similar to a dream within a dream

Page 15: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Point of View

The perspective from which the story is told

Page 16: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Tone

The overall voice that the author portrays in a work

Page 17: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Diction

The word choice a person/ author makes when writing

Page 18: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Rhetoric

The art of writing and argumentation

Page 19: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Syntax

The order in which words appear in a sentence

Page 20: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Mood

The overall feeling or atmosphere the work gives to the reader

Page 21: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Theme

The overall meaning or message a work sends to its audience

Page 22: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

End Rhyme

Rhyme that comes at the end of a line in a poem

Page 23: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Internal Rhyme

rhyme between a word within a line and another either at the end of the same line or within another line

Page 24: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Slant Rhyme

Words that do not quite rhyme but are still paired within a poem. Ex. Gain and again

Page 25: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Assonance

the use of words that have the same or very similar vowel sounds near one another. Ex. as in “summer fun” and “rise high in the bright sky”

Page 26: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Alliteration

Repeated consonant sounds Ex. Suzy sells seashells

Page 27: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Blank Verse

un-rhyming verse written in iambic pentameter. It has 10 syllables per line

Page 28: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

narrative

A written work that comes in the form of a “story”

Page 29: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Ballad

any light, simple song, especially one of sentimental or romantic character, having two or more stanzas all sung to the same melody.

Page 30: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Lyric

having the form and musical quality of a song, and especially the character of a songlike outpouring of the poet's own thoughts and feelings, as distinguished from epic and dramatic poetry.

Page 31: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Sonnet

a poem of 14 lines, usually in iambic pentameter, with rhymes arranged according to one of certain definite schemes

Page 32: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Literary Period

The time frame in which a work was written as it portrays the characteristics consistent with other works written in the same time. Ex. Modernism

Page 33: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Stream of Consciousness

a literary style in which a character's thoughts, feelings, and reactions are depicted in a continuous flow uninterrupted by objective description or conventional dialogue

Page 34: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Irony

the expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite, typically for humorous or emphatic effect

Page 35: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Sarcasm

the use of irony to mock or convey contempt

Page 36: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Situational Irony

irony involving a situation in which actions have an effect that is opposite from what was intended, so that the outcome is contrary to what was expected.

Page 37: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Dramatic Irony

Irony in a play in which the audience knows something that the characters do not.

Page 38: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Verbal Irony

When a person says or writes one thing and means another, or uses words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of the literal meaning.

Page 39: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Satire

the use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices, particularly in the context of contemporary politics and other topical issues

Ex. Family Guy

Page 40: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Figurative Language

Similes, metaphors, imagery, ways to describes things in vivid detail and with comparisons

Page 41: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Simile

A comparison using ‘like’ or ‘as’

Page 42: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Metaphor

A comparison that does not use ‘like’ or ‘as’

Page 43: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Hyperbole

Extreme exaggeration

Page 44: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Idiom

an expression whose meaning is not predictable from the usual meanings of its constituent elements, as kick the bucket

Page 45: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Connotation

The implied meaning of a word

Page 46: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Denotation

The given definition of a word

Page 47: AMERICAN LITERATURE 50 Common Literary Terms. Fiction A work that is not based on reality.

Cognates

Words from different languages that sound alike because both languages are derived from the same langage.

Ex. Fabuloso and fabulous