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| writers attitude toward his subject, the way the writer feels about the characters |
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| when and where the story takes place. |
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| perspective in a work of fiction - Character(s) thoughts we listen in on. |
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| I, me, mine, myself we, us, our, ourselves |
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| you, yours, your, yourselves |
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| He, him, himsilf she, her, hers, herself it, its, itself |
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Can be the central (main character) or Peripheral (outside looking in). |
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| Can be restricted (listens in on thoughts of only one character) or non-restricted (listens in on thoughts of more than one character) |
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| Demonstrated when a character makes you feel confident that his/her viewpoint and thought processes are believable or accurate. |
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| Demonstrated when a character makes you feel that his/her viewpoint and thought processes are unbelievable or inaccurate. posible reasons could be because the character is nieve or on drugs. |
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| I, he, she persona, the storyteller talks directly to the reader. |
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| Word picture, provikes a reaction by the reader of one or more of hte five senses. |
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| Storyteller, voice the author uses to tell the story. |
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| typical ancient story story or a fiction or half-truth, especially one that forms part of an ideology. |
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| A character that is two dimentional or predictable. |
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| A character that is three dimentional or capable of suprising himself or the reader. (Gurov-The Lady with the Dog) |
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| Presinting something and letting the reader decide what the meaning is. ( permits you to become a participant) |
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| Old fasioned story telling. ( This is the way it is) |
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| Know the type of character and background |
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| To say one thing but mean the opposite of what was said. |
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| A story where a victimize character exacts revenge/payback. |
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| dives into characters thoughts |
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Moral instrument that ridicules human fault in a humerous way. Humerous attack on human attitudes. |
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| A comprehension or perception of reality by means of a sudden intuitive realization: “I experienced an epiphany, a spiritual flash that would change the way I viewed myself” (Frank Maier). |
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| combining the morbid and grotesque with humor and farce to give a disturbing effect and convey the absurdity and cruelty of life |
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