Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Vocabulary
LIA/LIC4 Class
76
Literature
Undergraduate 1
05/07/2009

Additional Literature Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
alliteration
Definition
a succession of similiary sounds; occurs in the repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of successive words.
Term
assonance
Definition
to repeat the sound of a vowel - may occur initially or internally
Term
connotation
Definition
overtones or suggestions of additional meaning that gains from all the contexts in which we have met it in the past. An association - emotional or other wise - which the word evokes.
Term
denotation
Definition
"literal meaning" defined in the dictionary.
Term
epic
Definition
long narratives tracing the adventures of popular heros.
Term
epiphany
Definition
in literary short stories, some moment of insight discovery, or revelation by which a character's life, or view of life, is greatly altered.
Term
genre
Definition
French word for "type". Used to classify literature according to form, style, or content. Sonnet, novel, tradegy, and elegy are all examples.
Term
elegy
Definition
Greek & Romas times, used elegiac meter - alternating hexameter and pentameter lines - lamenting over loss of someone or something.
Term
lyric
Definition
a short poem expressing the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker.
Term
motivation
Definition
sufficient reason for characters to behave as they do.
Term
motif
Definition
a significant element that recurs either in a specific literary work, a group of literary texts, or in literature as a whole. Can be plots, imagery, symbols, themes, ideas, narrative details, or characters.
Term
narrative
Definition
main purpose is to tell a story.
Term
onomatopoeia
Definition
an attempt to represent a thing or action by a word that imitates the sound associated with it: zoom, whiz, crash, bang, ding-dong, pitter-patter, yakety-yak.
Term
persona
Definition
a fictitious character: not the poet, but the poet's creation.
Term
setting
Definition
a story's time and place.
Term
novel
Definition
a book-length story in pros, whose author tries to create the sense that while we read, we experience actual life.
Term
fiction
Definition
from Latin fictio, "a shaping, a counterfeiting". A name for stories not entirely factual, but at least partically shaped, made up, imagined.
Term
nonfiction
Definition
the author presents actual people and events in story form.
Term
apprenticeship novel
Definition
the kind of novel in which a youth struggles toward maturity, seeking, perhaps, some consistent worldview or philosophy of life.
Term
epic novel
Definition
a long, formal narrative poen with elevated style. Narrate a story of national importance based on the life and actions of a hero; frequently the fate.
Term
epistolary novel
Definition
early novels told in the form of letter. Contain only one character, often contained letter by several of the characters in the book.
Term
picaresque novel
Definition
a likable scoundrel wanders through adventures, living by his wits, duping the straight citizenry.
Term
novella
Definition
a term for short novel, mainly describes the size of a narrative; it refers to a narrative midway in length between a short story and a novel.
Term
subplot
Definition
(double plot), a secondary arrangement of incidents, involving not the protagonist but someone less important.
Term
exposition
Definition
the opening portion of a tale that sets the scene (if any), introduces the main characters, tells us what happened before the story opened, and provides any other background info that we neeed in order to understand and care about the events to follow.
Term
foreshadowing
Definition
an indication of events to come.
Term
conflict
Definition
struggles between two forces in literary work that constitutes the foundation of plot, or arrangements of events, actions, and situations in a narrative work. Can be other characters, situations, events, and fate.
Term
recognition
Definition
the revelation of some fact not known before or some person's true identity.
Term
rising action
Definition
the part of the story (including the exposition) in which events start moving toward a climax.
Term
crisis
Definition
a moment of high tension.
Term
climax
Definition
the moment of greates tension at which the outcome is to be decided.
Term
falling action
Definition
occurs after the climax, the subsequent events, including a resolution.
Term
denouement
Definition
(resolution), the outcome or conclusion - "the untying of the knot".
Term
protagonist
Definition
a leading character, a word usebly saved for the primary figure in a larger and more eventful play.
Term
antagonist
Definition
the most significant character or force that opposes the protagonist in a narrative.
Term
hero
Definition
it may apply equally well to a central character who is not especially brave or virteous.
Term
antihero
Definition
a protagonist conspiciously lacking in one or more of the usual attributes of a traditional hero (bravery, skill, idealism, sense of purpose).
Term
foil
Definition
a character whose qualities or actions are in stark contrast with those of another character, usually the protagonist; often used to convey or develop the protagonist's character.
Term
stock character
Definition
specific types of characters, or fictional or imagined people in a narrative or literary text, so commonly seen in literature that they are seen as stereotypical types. Most recognizable in fairy tales...godmothers, cruel stepmothers, price charming. Westerns contain strong silent, solitary heros. Occasional sidekicks who may assist the hero or offer comic relief; and cruel villains with black hats who ultimately lose to the hero.
Term
flat character
Definition
fictional or imagined character, typically minor character with single outstanding trait and is often based on a stock character or a common stereotypical character. This character does not change in text, distinguishing it from round (dynamic) character, usually one of the main characters, presented in a complex and detailed manner, and usually undergoes a significant change in response to the events or circumstances described in the plot.
Term
round character
Definition
also called the dynamic character - usually one of the main characters, preented in complex and detailed manner, and usually undergoes a significant change in response to events or circumstances described in plot. Distinct from flat or static characters, who are usually minor characters, identified by a single outstanding trait, who does not change in the text.
Term
first person
Definition
story told from perspective of a persona who uses "I" or "me" to recount the story's events. Usually involved in the plot, but not always.
Term
third person objective
Definition
story is told from the perspective of a persona who uses "he" or "she" to recount the story
Term
third person onmiscient narrator
Definition
narrator that is all-knowing and has complete knowledge of all characters' thought and histories, as well as the story's events, settings, and contexts. Can move freely between any number of characters.
Term
third person limited-omniscient narrator
Definition
narrator that has access to one or more (not all) characters' thoughts and some of the story's events and contexts.
Term
third person intrusive narrator
Definition
narrator who offers comments, critiques, interpretation, or additioanl information to readers about characters or events as he/she recounts events. Relates events with a minimum of commentary, observation, or inerpretation.
Term
third person unreliable or fallible narrators
Definition
narrators whose readers are given reasons to question or doubt validity of their perspective. Readers doubt reliability or accruacy based on his/her age, intelligence, sanity, or relationship to events.
Term
third person self-conscious narrator
Definition
narrator who draws attention to the fact that he/she is narrating a work of fiction, often the case in metafiction.
Term
verbal irony
Definition
rhetorical - when there is a discrepancy between either what a character says and what that character believes to be true, or when a character says the opposite of what he/she means.
Term
situational irony
Definition
features a discrepancy between expectation and reality and appears in two forms - dramatic or tragic.
Term
dramatic irony
Definition
discrepancy between what a character sees or perceives and what the audience knows is true.
Term
tragic irony
Definition
involves an imperfect interpretation of information or a situation resulting in a character's tragic downfall.
Term
apostrophe
Definition
a way of addressing someone or something invisible or not ordinarily spoken to.
Term
conceit
Definition
elaborate comparisons.
Term
hyperbole
Definition
a figure of speech which uses exaggeration for comic, ironic, or serious effect. Its opposite is understatement or meiosis.
Term
metaphor
Definition
a figure of speech where one thing is described in terms of another. Does not use the words such as "like" or "as".
Term
metonymy
Definition
a figure of speech that replaces the name of one thing with the name of another closely related. Example: "the crown" is used to signify the monarchy.
Term
paradox
Definition
a statemetn that, on the surface, appears to be self-contradictory, but upon analysis, reveeals an underlying truth, significance, or meaning. An oxymoron, or two opposite or contradictory words juxtaposed for effect or emphasis.
Term
personification
Definition
a figure of speech through which inanimate objects, ideas, concepts, or animals are given human characteristics, or are referred to as if human.
Term
simile
Definition
a figure of speech that is a comparison of two different thngs or ideas using "like" or "as". Are used to illustrate or enhance an idea or an imaage - less definite than metaphors.
Term
synecdoche
Definition
a figure of speech where a part of something is used to represent the whole (ex: "hands" to refer to manual labor) or where the whole is used to represent the part (ex: "Montreal" is used to refer to Montreal Canadians). A kind of metonymy.
Term
transferred epithet
Definition
an adjective or adjectival phrase used to defin a person or a things. It can also refer to a characteristic attribute or quality of a person or thing.
Term
diction
Definition
either (a) author's choice or words or vocabulary in a literary work, or (b) performer's manner or style of speaking, including phrasing and punctuation.
Term
Poetic diction
Definition
refers specifically to the choice and phrasing of words suitable to verse.
Term
tone
Definition
the author's attitude in a literary text toward the audience or reader (familiar, formal) or toward the subject itself (saturic, celebratory, ironic).
Term
mood
Definition
the feeling or emotion created specifically through elements of the setting. Is more specific than tone.
Term
symbolism
Definition
use of symbols or set of related symbols or a sustained use of symbols. A literary movement in late 19th century France as a reaction to realist impulses in literature.
Term
theme
Definition
a significant abstract idea emerging from a literary work or the statement the work appears to make about its subject. Usually are indirectly suggested and are generally conveyed through figurative language, imagery, symbols, or motifs.
Term
didactic
Definition
themes that are overt or explicitly stated.
Term
allegory
Definition
abstract concepts are represented as something concrete, typically minor elements in the story, such as characters, objects, actions, or events. Possesses two parallel levels of meaning/understanding; literal - where a surface level story is recounted, and symbolic - which addresses abstract ides. This is often considered extended metaphors; the surface level story helps to convey moral, religious, political philosophical ideas.
Term
allusion
Definition
indirect reference in a literary text to a well-known person or place, or to a historical, political, or cultural event. Reference can also be to a literary, religious, or mythological text - not usually identified, it is assumed the reader will make the connection.
Term
aside
Definition
a short remark or speech spoken by a character to the audience or to another character (it is assumed that this is not heard by the other characters). Tends to reveal insight into plot, character, or emotion.
Term
convention
Definition
(a) the parts of a text that either precede or floow a given passage, or (b)the social, cultural, biographical, and literary circumstances that exist outside a text.
Term
convention
Definition
either (a) the parts of a text that either precede or follow a given passage, or (b) the social, cultural, biographical, and literary circumstances that exist outside a text. In both cases, context works against looking at a text in isolation.
Term
dialogue
Definition
either (a) representation of spoken exchanges between or among characters, or (b) literary work where characters discuss or debate a particular subject.
Term
Deus ex Machina
Definition
Latin for "god out of a machine". Refers to: (a) practice in Greek drama of god descending into the play from a crane-like machine in order to solve a problem in a plot and thus enable the play to end, or (b) an unexpected, contrived, or improbable ending or solution in a literary text.
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