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18 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
diction
the kinds of words, phrases, syntax, and figurative language in a work of literature
figurative language
departure from the literal meaning of a word
connotation
range of secondary/associated significances (ex. "home" - privacy, coziness...)
denotation
primary significance of the word (ex. "home" - the place where one lives)
irony
discrepancy between what is expected and what might reasonably be expected and what actually occurs
sound devices
alliteration (repetition of first constant in a sentence), assonance
tone
author's attitude toward the material/readers
understatement
deliberately representing something as much less in magnitude or importance than it really is
voice
the manner in which the story is told (ex. the voice of the story could be of a child, teacher, prisoner, author...)
hyperbole
extravagant exaggeration for effect (hey, it's alliteration!)
motif
a type of incident, device, reference, or formula - which occurs frequently in literature (ex. colors in great gatsby)
archetype
original after which others are patterned (ex. eve/pandora: woman as bringer of evil)
criticism
term for studies concerned with defining, classifying, and evaluating works of literature
genre
a type or species of literature
heroic journey
series of changes necessary for the development of a literary hero (innocence, initiation, chaos, recognition)
pathos
passion of deep suffering felt by reader or audience
tragic hero
as proscribed by Aristotle. requirement for tragic hero: of obscure birth, flaw=pride, fall from high to low, flaw is the cause of his undoing.
theme
general claim incorporated into the work to persuade the reader (ex. hypocrisy in the scarlet letter)