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Literary Elements
final exam review
32
Literature
9th Grade
06/02/2011

Additional Literature Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
NARRATOR
Definition

the character telling the story

 

Katniss is the narrator of The Hunger Games

Term

TYPES OF

POINT OF VIEW

Definition

1st person: "I"

3rd person: "he/she"

2nd person (rare): "you"

 

Catcher in the Rye is told in the 1st person

Term
PROTAGONIST
Definition

the main character

of a story

 

Marjane is the protagonist of Persepolis.

Term
ANTAGONIST
Definition

a character or force in conflict with the protagonist

 

The Capital is an antagonist in The Hunger Games

Term
SETTING
Definition

the time,

historical era,

and place

where the action of the story occurs

 

Catcher in the Rye is mostly set over a three day

period in New York City during the 1950s

Term
THEME
Definition

the idea(s) or message(s) that the author is trying to convey to the reader

one theme of The Hunger Games is retaining your humanity during times of inhumanity or oppression

Term
CONFLICT
Definition

a struggle between

opposing forces

In Speak, Melinda is conflicted about whether or not she should tell people what happened to her over the summer. This is an internal conflict. 

In The Hunger Games, Katniss is in conflict with the game-makers and her opponants in the arena.These are external conflicts.

Term
TYPES OF CONFLICT
Definition

*character vs. character (external)

*character vs. himself/herself (internal)

*character vs. society (external)

*character vs. nature (external)

Term
CHARACTERIZATION
Definition
the creation and development of realistic characters
Term
WAYS OF CHARACTERIZING
Definition

*physical description

*what the character does (actions)

*what the character says (external dialogue)

*what the character thinks

*how other characters react to character

 *character's relationships with other characters

Term
MOOD
Definition
the feeling or atmosphere the writer creates for the reader
Term
WAYS AUTHORS CREATE MOOD
Definition

*description of setting

*dialogue

*imagery

*figurative language

Term
TONE
Definition
the writer's attitude toward a subject or character
Term
SYMBOL
Definition

an object (or sometimes place or person) that represents something else - that holds greater meaning beyond the literal

examples: Holden's hat, Katniss's mockingjay pin, Melinda's turkey sculpture

Term
SIMILE
Definition

A figure of speech in which two essentially unlike

things are compared,

often in a phrase

introduced by like or as.

"She's like the wind."

Term
METAPHOR
Definition

The comparison of one thing to another without the

use of like or as:

“When she runs, she is the wind."

Term
ALLUSION
Definition

a passing, unexplained reference to another work of literature or art, a character, historical figure, place, etc.

"Hold it now and watch the hoodwink
As I make you stop, think
You'll think you're looking at Aquaman"

(One Week - Bare Naked Ladies)

Term
PERSONIFICATION
Definition

endowing inanimate objects or abstractions with

human characteristics

"the clouds wept"

Term
PARADOX
Definition

a statement that initially appears to be contradictory, yet holds truth.

"I can't live, with or without you." (U2)

Term
OXYMORON
Definition
a paradox written as a quick, two part statement. "deafening silence"
Term
IRONY
Definition

The use of words to convey

a meaning that is the opposite of

its literal meaning.

 The contrast between what appears to be true

and what is actually true.

Term
DRAMATIC IRONY
Definition

...occurs when the reader or the audience knows more than the characters in the work of literature.

(eg "Titanic" film)

Term
FORESHADOWING
Definition

providing the reader with a clue or hint to what is going to happen later in the

action of the story

In the black and white sequence at the beginning of The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy interacts with characters played by actors who will later play different roles in Oz

Term
FLASHBACK
Definition

an event or scene that occurs before the main action of the story

The bulk of the action in A Catcher in the Rye is

told in flashback, as Holden recounts his story

to the audience (a therapist?)

Term
CLIMAX
Definition

a decisive moment that is of maximum intensity or is a major turning point in a plot.

The climax of Speak occurs when Andy tries to attack Melinda in her secret closet hideaway.

Term
ALLITERATION
Definition

The repetition of the

same sounds or of the

same kinds of sounds

at the beginning of words

"Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers."

Term
ASSONANCE
Definition

The repetition of a

vowel sound within a line,

as in the phrase

"tilting at windmills."

Term
CONSONANCE
Definition

the repetition of consonants (or consonant patterns), especially at the ends of words, as in

"blank" and "think" or "strong" and "string"

Term
INTERNAL RHYME
Definition
A rhyme contained within a line, rather than at the more traditional ends of lines. (Usually examples of both consonance and assonance), as in “It's a bad waste, a sad case, a rat race-- it's breaking me." (B. Joel)
Term
ONOMATOPOEIA
Definition

The formation or use of words such as buzz or murmur that imitate the sounds associated with

the objects or actions

to which they refer.

Term
APOSTROPHE
Definition

addressing someone not present, or a personified object or idea, as in 

“O Death, where is thy sting?"

Term
HYPERBOLE
Definition

obvious and intentional exaggeration.

"You can hit my father over the head with a chair and he won't wake up, all you have to do to my mother is cough somewhere in Siberia and she'll hear you" (Holden Caulfield)

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