Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Lit Terms # 4

Interior monologue: A piece of writing expressing a character's inner thoughts

Inversion: When the normal order of words is reversed in order to achieve a particular effect of emphasis

Juxtaposition: When two or more ideas, places, characters, and their actions are placed side by side in a narrative or poem for compare and contrast

Lyric: A type of poetry that explores the poets personal interpretation of and feelings about the world

Magic(al) realism: A literal genre or style that incorporates fantastic or mythical elements into otherwise realistic fiction

Metaphor (extended, controlling, & mixed):
Extended: a metaphor that is extended or develops as far as te author wants to take it
Controlling: a symbolic story in which the real meaning is not directly put across the whole poem
Mixed: a metaphor that has gotten out of control and mixes it's terms so they are visually imaginatively incompatible

Metonymy: A word that is used to stand for something else that it has attributes for or is associated with

Modernism: rejection of 19th century traditions

Monologue: A dramatic soliloquy

Mood: The atmosphere of the story

Motif: object or idea that repeats itself through the literary piece

Myth: A story dealing with supernatural beings or heroes

Narrative: A collection of events that tells a story either through telling or writing

Narrator: One who tells a story

Naturalism: A literary movement seeking to depict life as accurately as possible

Novelette/novella: An extended fictional prose narrative that is longer than a short story but not quite a novel

Omniscient point of view: When the reader is seeing and all knowing

Onomatopoeia: Words that sound like what they mean

Oxymoron: A phrase composed of opposites; a contradiction

Pacing: The way the author speeds up or slows down the story

Parable: A story that instructs

Paradox: A situation it statement that seems to contradict itself, but on closer inspection, it does not

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