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99 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
A narrative or description having a second meaning beneath the surface one. A story, fictional or nonfiction, in which characters, things, and events represent qualities or concepts. The interaction of these characters, things, events is meant to reveal an abstraction or a truth. These characters, etc. may be symbolic of the ideas referred to.
Allegory
The repetition at close intervals of initial identical consonant sounds. Or, vowel sounds in successive words or syllables that repeat
Alliteration
An indirect reference to something (usually a literary text) with which the reader is expected to be familiar. Allusions are usually literary, historical, Biblical, or mythological.
Allusion
An event or situation that may be interpreted in more than one way. Also, the manner of expression of such an event or situation may be ambiguous. Artful language may be ambiguous. Unintentional ambiguity is usually vagueness.
Ambiguity
Assignment of something to a time when it was not in existence, e.g. the watch Merlyn wore in The Once and Future King.
Anachronism
Repetition of a word, phrase, or clause at the beginning of two or more sentences in a row. This device is a deliberate form of repetition and helps make the writer's point more coherent.
Anaphora
A term used in existential criticism to describe both the individual and the collective anxiety-neurosis of the period following the Second World War. This feeling of anxiety, dread, or anguish is notably present in the works of writers like Jean Paul Sartre and Albert Camus.
Angst
A balancing of two opposite or contrasting words, phrases, or clauses.
Antithesis
An address to the dead as if living; to the inanimate as if animate; to the absent as if present; to the unborn as if alive. Examples: "O Julius Caesar thou are mighty yet; thy spirit walks abroad," or "Roll on, thou deep and dark blue ocean, roll."
Apostrophe
A term borrowed by psychologist Carl Jung who described archetypes as "primordial images" formed by repeated experiences in the lives of our ancestors, inherited in the "collective unconscious" of the human race and expressed in myths, religion, dreams, fantasies, and literature. These "images" of character, plot pattern, symbols recur in literature and evoke profound emotional responses in the reader because they resonate with an image already existing in our unconscious mind, e.g. death, rebirth.
Archetype
A dramatic convention by which an actor directly addresses the audience but it is not supposed to be heard by the other actors on the stage.
Aside
Repetition of a vowel sound within two or more words in close proximity. "Fake" and "lake" denote rhyme; "lake" and "fate" demonstrate assonance.
Assonance
A series of words separated by commas (with no conjunction), e.g. "I came, I saw, I conquered." The parts of the sentence are emphasized equally; in addition, the use of commas with no intervening conjunction speeds up the flow of the sentence.
Asyndeton
Construction in which both halves of the sentence are about the same length and importance, sometimes used to emphasize contrast.
Balance
The process by which an unhealthy emotional state produced by an imbalance of feelings is corrected and emotional health is restored.
Catharsis
The method an author uses to develop characters in a work. In direct charachterization, the author straightforwardly states the character’s traits. With indirect characterization, those traits are implied through what the character says, does, how the character dresses, interacts with other characters, etc.
Characterization
Arrangement of repeated thoughts in the pattern of X Y Y X. Chiasmus is often short and summarizes a main idea, e.g., "ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."
Chiasmus
Deals with the relations and intrigues of gentlemen and ladies living in a polished and sophisticated society; it evokes laughter mainly at the violations of social conventions and decorum and relies on the wit and humor of the dialogue for its effect.
Comdey of Manners
Humorous speeches and incidents in the course of the serious action of a tragedy; frequently widens and enriches the tragic significance of the work.
Comic Relief
Unusual or surprising comparison between two very different things (a special kind of metaphor or complicated analogy.
Conceit
Language that describes specific, observable things, people or places, rather than ideas or qualities.
Concrete Language
Rather than the dictionary definition, the associations associated by a word. Implied meaning rather than literal meaning or denotation.
Connotation
Repetition of a consonant sound within two or more words in close proximity.
Consonance
Sentence which begins with the main idea and then expands on that idea with a series of details or other particulars.
Cumulative
Word choice, particularly as an element of style. Different types and arrangements of words have significant effects on meaning. An essay written this way, for example, would be much less colorful, but perhaps more precise, than street slang.
Diction
A term used to describe fiction or nonfiction that teaches a specific lesson or moral or provides a model or correct behavior or thinking.
Didactic
When the reader is aware of an inconsistency between a fictional or nonfiction character's perception of a situation and the truth of that situation.
Dramatic Irony
A formal sustained poem lamenting the death of a particular person
Elegy
Sentence structure which leaves out something in the second half. Usually, there is a subject-verb-object combination in the first half of the sentence, and the second half of the sentence will repeat the structure but omit the verb and use a comma to indicate the ellipsed material
Elliptical
A persistent feeling of tiredness or weariness which often afflicts existential man, often manifesting as boredom
Ennui
A quotation or aphorism at the beginning of a literary work suggestive of a theme. One found at the beginning of John Kennedy Toole's Confederacy of Dunces: "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign; that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him." —Jonathan Swift.
Epigraph
A major character's moment of realization or awareness.
Epiphany
a term used to characterize a person or thing, such as rosy-fingered in rosy-fingered dawn or the Great in Catherine the Great. Also a term used as a descriptive substitute for the name or title or a person, such as The Great Emancipator for Abraham Lincoln.
Epithet
The use of a word or phrase that is less direct, but is also considered less distasteful or less offensive than another. E.g. "He is at rest" instead of "He is dead." Also consider "Technicolor yawn" for "vomiting."
Euphemism
The act of interpreting or discovering the meaning of a text. usually involves close reading and special attention to figurative language.
Explication
Background information provided by a writer to enhance a reader's understanding of the context of a fictional or nonfictional story.
Exposition
A type of comedy in which one-dimensional characters are put into ludicrous situations; ordinary standards of probability and motivation are freely violated in order to evoke laughter.
Farce
A product of a writer's imagination, usually made up of characters, plot, setting, point of view, and theme.
Fiction
A word or words that are inaccurate literally, but describe by calling to mind sensations or responses that the thing described evokes. May be in the form of metaphors or similes, both non-literal comparison. Shakespeare's "All the world's a stage" is an example of non-literal figurative language (metaphor specifically).
Figurative Language
A form of expression in which words are used out of the usual sense in order to make the meaning more specific
Figure of Speech
A character constructed around a single idea or quality; is immediately recognizable.
Flat Character
A character whose traits are the opposite of another and who thus points up the strengths and weaknesses of the other character.
Foil Character
Sentence consisting of three or more very short independent clauses joined by conjunctions.
Freight-train
French, a literary form or type; classification. e.g. tragedy, comedy, novel, essay, poetry.
Genre
Overwhelming pride or insolence that results in the misfortune of the protagonist of a tragedy. It is the particular form of tragic flaw that results from excessive pride, ambition, or overconfidence. The excessive pride of Macbeth is a standard example in English drama.
Hubris
Conscious exaggeration used to heighten effect. Not intended literally, is often humorous. Example: "And fired the shot heard round the world."
Hyperbole
A word or group of words, either figurative or literal, used to describe a sensory experience or an object perceived by the senses. Always a concrete representation.
Image
The use of images, especially in a pattern of related images, often figurative, to create a strong unified sensory impression.
Imagery
A form or reasoning which works from a body of facts to the formulation of a generalization; frequently used in science and history.
Induction
Variation of the normal word order (subject first, then verb, then complement) which puts a modifier or the verb as first in the sentence. The element that appears first is emphasized more than the subject.
Inversion
When a reader is aware of a reality that differs from a character's perception of reality/ The literal meaning of a writer's words may be verbal. Generally speaking, a discrepancy between expectation and reality.
Irony
Opposite of hyperbole; intensifies an idea understatement by stating through the opposite. E.g. saying "It wasn't my best day" instead of "It was my worst day."
Litotes
A comparison of two things, often unrelated. A figurative verbal equation results where both "parts" illuminate one another.
Metaphor
So overused that its original impact has been lost.
Dead Metaphor
One developed at length and involves several points of comparison
Extended Metaphor
When two metaphors are jumbled together, often illogically.
Mixed Metaphor
Designation of one thing with something closely associated with it. E.g. calling the head of a committee a CHAIR, the king the CROWN, a newspaper the PRESS, or old people the GRAY HAIRS.
Metonymy
An atmosphere created by a writer's word choice (diction) and the details selected. Syntax is also a determiner because sentence strength, length, and complexity affect pacing.
Mood
The lesson drawn from a fictional or nonfictional story. A heavily didactic story
Moral
A frequently recurrent character, incident, or concept in literature.
Motif
An extended piece of prose fiction
• sociological novel —emphasizes the influence of economic and social conditions on characters and events and often embodies an implicit thesis for social reform.
• historical novel —takes its setting and a number of its characters and events from history.
• regional novel —emphasizes setting and mores of a particular locality as these affect character and action (local color); e.g. Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole.
• novel of ideas
• epistolary novel—tells narrative through letters (beginning of Frankenstein by Mary Shelly).
Novel
The use of a word whose pronunciation suggests its meaning. "Buzz," "hiss," "slam," and "pop" are commonly used examples.
Onomatopoeia
A rhetorical antithesis. Juxtaposing two contradictory terms, like "wise fool" or "deafening silence."
Oxymoron
A short story from which a lesson may be drawn.
Parable
A seemingly contradictory statement or situation which is actually true. This rhetorical device is often used for emphasis or simply to attract attention.
Paradox
Sentence construction which places in close proximity two or more equal grammatical constructions. Parallel structure may be as simple as listing two or three modifiers in a row to describe the same noun or verb; it may take the form of two or more of the same type of phrases (prepositional, participial, gerund, appositive) that modify the same noun or verb; it may also take the form of two or more subordinate clauses that modify the same noun or verb. Or, parallel structure may be a complex blend of single-word, phrase, and clause parallelism all in the same sentence.
Parallelism
An exaggerated imitation of a usually more serious work for humorous purposes. The writer of a parody uses the quirks of style of the imitated piece in extreme or ridiculous ways.
Parody
Qualities of a fictional or nonfictional work that evoke sorrow or pity. Over-emotionalism can be the result of an excess of pathos.
Pathos
Sentence that places the main idea or central complete thought at the end of the sentence, after all introductory elements—e.g. "Across the stream, beyond the clearing, from behind a fallen a tree, the lion emerged."
Periodic Sentence
Reversal in the hero's fortunes
Peripety
A writer often adopts a fictional voice to tell a story. Voice is usually determined by a combination of subject matter and audience.
Persona
Figurative Language in which inanimate objects, animals, ideas, or abstractions are endowed with human traits or human form—e.g. "When Duty whispers…”
Personification
System of actions represented in a dramatic or narrative work
Plot
The perspective from which a fictional or nonfictional story is told. First-person, third-person, or third-person omniscient points of view are commonly used
Point of View
Sentence which uses and or another conjunction, with no commas, to separate the items in a series, usually appearing in the form X and Y and Z, stressing equally each member of the series. It makes the sentence slower and the items more emphatic than in the asyndeton
Polysyndeton
Chief character in a dramatic or narrative work, usually trying to accomplish some objective or working toward some goal
Protagonist
A play on words that are identical or similar in sound but have sharply diverse meanings
Pun
Word or phrase used two or more times in close proximity.
Repetition
A character drawn with sufficient complexity to be able to surprise the reader without losing credibility
Round Character
A work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of human behavior by portraying it in an extreme way. Doesn't simply abuse (as with invective) or get personal (as with sarcasm). Usually targets groups or large concepts rather than individuals; its purpose is customarily to inspire change.
Satire
A type of verbal irony in which, under the guise of praise, a caustic and bitter expression of strong and personal disapproval is given. Personal, jeering, and intended to hurt.
Sarcasm
Locale and period in which the action takes place
Setting
A figurative comparison of two things, often dissimilar, using the connecting words: "like," "as," or "then." E.g. "More rapid than eagles his coursers they came."
Simile
Applies to works which contain elaborate expressions of the spirit. Also, applies to both Hamlet's situation and to his famous soliloquy, "To be or nor to be."
Situational Irony
When a character in a play speaks his thoughts aloud —usually by him or herself
Soliloquy
Conventional character types that recur repeatedly in various literary genres. E.g. the wicked stepmother or Prince Charming or the rascal.
Stock Character
Technique of writing that undertakes to reproduce the raw flow of consciousness, with the perceptions, thoughts, judgments, feelings, associations, and memories presented just as they occur without being tidied into grammatical sentences or given logical and narrative order.
Stream of Consciousness
The choices in diction, tone, and syntax that a writer makes. In combination they create a work's manner of expression. thought to be conscious and unconscious and may be altered to suit specific occasions. often habitual and evolves over time.
Style
A thing, event, or person that represents or stands for some idea or event. also simultaneously retain their own literal meanings. A figure of speech in which a concrete object is used to stand for an abstract idea —e.g. the cross for Christianity.
Symbol
Part of something is used to stand for the whole —e.g. "threads" for clothes; "wheels" for cars.
Synecdoche
In grammar, the arrangement of words as elements in a sentence to show their relationship
Syntax
A central idea of a work of fiction or nonfiction, revealed and developed in the course of a story or explored through argument.
Theme
A writer's attitude toward his or her subject matter revealed through diction, figurative language, and organization of the sentence and global levels.
Tone
Representations of serious actions which turn out disastrously.
Tragedy
Tragic error in judgment; a mistaken act which changes the fortune of the tragic hero from happiness to misery; also known as hamartia.
Tragic Flaw
-Deliberately representing something as much less than it really is —e.g. "Last week I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much it altered her appearance." —Jonathan Swift
Understatement
A work of fiction or nonfiction is said to be unified is all the parts are related to one central idea or organizing principle. Thus, unity is dependent upon coherence.
Unity
When the reader is aware of a discrepancy between the real meaning of a situation and the literal meaning of the writer's words.
Verbal Irony
When the reader is aware of a discrepancy between the real meaning of a situation and the literal meaning of the writer's words.
Zeugma