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Literary Terms and Techniques- Notes SAVE --Genre- a particular type or category of literature. Ex. Short story, poem, drama -Non fiction- material that is based on fact -Fiction- material that is made up, unrealistic, or seemingly real but not completely based in fact -- Sign posts for readingFICTION--Words of the wiser, epiphany, motif, contrasts & contradictions, tough questions, flashback NON FICTION- contrast & contradictions, extreme or absolute language, facts & statistics, word gaps, quoted words, BIG QUESTIONSWhat surprised me, what does the author think I know, How sis this challenge, change or confirm my beliefs --Short story- a brief story that is meant to be read in one sitting. --Plot – the storyline or a piece. There are 6 parts of a plot. --Exposition- the part of the plot where you learn about the main characters and the setting. --Conflict- the main problem of the story (Two kinds of conflict possibleInternal Conflict- the problem is in the character’s mind. External Conflict- the problem is outside the person’s mind and can effect him physically.) --Rising Action- the tensions that build based on the problem --Climax – the point where the problem is addressed one way or another --Falling Action- the part of the story where things fall back into place --Resolution- the end of the story --Antagonist- main character --Protagonist- opposing character or force (the bad guy) --Theme- the underlying message or universal idea of the story. Ex. Man vs. nature, responsibility --Symbol- an item used to express something else. Ex. A flag represents our country. --Foreshadowing- when the author gives hints as to what will happen next. --Flashback- when the author moves backwards in time to give you a hint of background information. -Characterization- the description of a character. This can be done directly or indirectly. --Direct characterization- the author tells you what you need to know. Ex. Mark loved science. --Indirect characterization-the author expects you to use clues to learn about the character. Ex. Mark waved his hand frantically when the teacher asked yet another science question. -- Character trait- a quality that makes the character seem real. Ex. The girl was shy. Normal people can be shy, so this girl seems like someone we could know. -- Character motive- a force that motivates or drives the character into action. Ex. –Tom opened the refrigerator. (His motive is that he is hungry.) --Literal Language- can be understood exactly how it is stated. Ex.- A pain in the neck means that your neck hurts. --Denotation- the dictionary definition of the word. --Connotation- the association made with the word. Ex. Home is associated with love, safety, and family --Figurative Language- can not be taken literally. Ex. A pain in the neck means that someone is annoying. Examples of Figurative language--Pun- a play on words unsin words that sound the same or are spelled the same to make a joke. Ex. The bike fell because it was two tired. --Idiom- a commonly understood expression. Ex. It’s raining cats and dogs. --Simile -–(an imagery technique) a comparison of two unrelated ideas using “like” or “as”. Ex. My cat is built like a tank. --Metaphor- –(an imagery technique) a comparison of two unrelated things that does not use “like” or “as”. Ex. My cat is a tank. --Personification-–(an imagery technique) giving human characteristics to inanimate objects. Ex. The bag danced in the wind. --Onomatopoeia-–(an imagery technique) a word that sounds like its meaning. Ex. Hum, buzz, bang, boom -- Hyperbole- great exaggeration. EX.- Everyone knows that! (Really, everyone or just a lot of people?) --Oxymoron- two opposite words used together to express and idea. Ex. Clearly confusing, delightfully awful -Author purpose-what is the goal or purpose of having written this piece? (Common purposes are to entertain, inform, explain, clarify…) -Audience- the age or interest group for whom the piece is written DRAMA NOTES --Drama- genre that includes all sorts of plays --Act- the larger sections of the play. They are the units of action. --Scene- a smaller section of the play. Many scenes may make on act. --Set- the construction on the stage that suggests the time and place of action. --Props- moveable items that the actors use to make their actions seem realistic --Stage Directions- the bracketed information that tells what the stage looks like and how the characters should move and speak. --Dialogue- what the characters say. (NOTE- in drama, dialogue doesn’t not have quotation marks. The character name appears before the speech. -- Script- a written form of a play Connecting to reading- mentally relating the reading to yourself and your experiences -Text-text- relating one reading to another -Text – self- relating the reading to your personal life -Text-world- relating the reading to the world Notes on Poetry--Poetry- a genre that includes all sorts of poems --Verse a line of poetry --Stanza – a group of lines of verse. Stanzas are grouped similarly to paragraphs. They change with each new idea. Poetic sound devices --Rhythm- the beat of a poem. It is made by a combination of stressed and unstressed syllables to make a song- like pattern rhyme in a --Rhyme- when words sound similar --End rhyme -when the words at the end of a line of verse --Rhyme pattern- (or rhyme scheme)the pattern of rhyming words in a poem. Ex. (ABAB CDCD) --Couplets- when two nearby lines rhyme. Ex. Will you eat them house?/ Will you eat them with a mouse? -- Repetition/ Refrain- a line or two that repeats multiple time throughout the poem. Ex. Isabel, Isabel didn’t worry/ Isabel didn’t scream or scurry. --Alliteration- repetition of a consonant sound. Ex ten tiny toads tapping to the tune. Figurative Language is also used in poetry. (See above)