Shared Flashcard Set

Details

LITERARY TERMS
ENG 2013 L., Mercado-Lopez
65
Literature
Undergraduate 3
12/01/2011

Additional Literature Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Content
Definition
What the work is about; the plot, characters, settings, events
Term
Purpose
Definition
(not to be confused with "intent"): the author's goal for his work--to explain, persuade, or to entertain; the reason for writing
Term
Form
Definition
metaphorically, the "container" or "mold" of a work of art, as opposed to its material or contents; hence any of the structural patterns or organizing principles that underlie and shape a work. Forms can be traditional and very rigid and specific--e.g., the sonnet in poetry, the sonata in classical music--or vague, flexible, and hybrid, as in most modern works
Term
Authorial Voice
Definition
the voice of the implied author; the controlling presence behind the characters of the story. Not to be confused with the biographical author (creator); easier to “hear” when narrator is in 3rd person
Term
Authorial Intent
Definition
The idea that a work was written to have a particular meaning determined by the author
Term
Intentional Fallacy
Definition
one infers from a text that the author "intended" to accomplish a certain goal and then uses that inference in interpreting other parts of the text assumes that the author’s “intended” meaning is of primary importance
Term
Evidential/Biographical Fallacy
Definition
the error of believing that the characters and events in the author's historical life must have inspired, influenced, or been the source for any fictional events or characters in the work, or that the narrative speaker in a literary work must be synonymous with the author or poet's own voice and viewpoints
Term
Signifier
Definition
the "sound pattern" of a word, either in mental projection—as when one silently recites lines from a poem to one's self—or in actual, physical realization as part of a speech act
Term
Signified
Definition
the concept or meaning of the word
Term
Sign
Definition
the whole that is comprised of the signifier and the signifier
Term
Binaries
Definition
opposite relationships that give structure and order to a text. Poststructuralism attempts to render these meaningless
Term
Hierarchies
Definition
privileging of one idea at the expense of another
Term
Deconstruction
Definition
practice of identifying the contradictions within a text’s claim to have a single, stable meaning, and showing that a text can be taken to mean a variety of things that differ significantly from what it purports to mean
Term
Objective Theory of Art
Definition
A term applied by M.H. Abrams to the view that holds the literary work to be most significant as an object in itself, independent of the facts of composition, the actuality it imitates, its author’s stated intention, or the effect it produces on its audience
Term
Tension
Definition
the resolution of opposites often in irony or paradox
Term
Omniscient Narrator
Definition
narrator that knows everything and is everywhere (omnipresent); used mostly in novels
Term
Limited Omniscient Narrator
Definition
Focuses on the thoughts, feelings and actions of a single character
Term
Objective Narrator
Definition
Presents actions and thoughts of characters in objective/nonjudgmental manner; reader must uncover the meaning
Unreliable narrator: Narrator that presents some or much of the story incorrectly
Term
Narrative Speed
Definition
how fast or slow the story is narrated
Term
Implied Metaphor
Definition
metaphor where relationship is not directly stated
Term
Extended Metaphor
Definition
Metaphor that runs throughout an entire work; incorporates a central metaphor; supported and extended by smaller metaphors
Term
Dead Metaphor
Definition
A metaphor/saying that has been used so often it has lost the original imagery of its meaning and has taken on a new meaning
Term
Synecdoche
Definition
a figure of speech that uses a part of the whole to represent the whole
Term
Symbol
Definition
An object, picture, word or mark that represents something else by association
Term
Antagonist
Definition
the character in opposition to the protagonist
Term
Round
Definition
complex character; complexity usually developed throughout plot; usually a major character
Term
Dynamic
Definition
a changing character; becomes round
Term
Protagonist
Definition
the main character of the story
Term
Flat
Definition
lacks complexity; undeveloped; usually a minor character
Term
Static
Definition
an unchanging character; does not becoming round
Term
Foil
Definition
a character that is constructed to contrast with the protagonist in order to emphasize the qualities of the protagonist or another primary character
Term
Stock
Definition
a character whose personality/characteristics are greatly exaggerated; easily recognizable; fit readers’ preconceived notions of cultural “types”; archetypes or just very recognizable
Term
Theme
Definition
Generalized idea about human nature
Term
Motif
Definition
Recurring images, symbols, ideas, actions, or characters that emphasize certain themes
Term
Convention
Definition
a practice or device which is accepted as a necessary, useful , or given feature of a genre
Term
Line
Definition
single line of words in a poem
Term
Stanza
Definition
Two or more lines of poetry that together form one of the divisions of a poem. The stanzas of a poem are usually of the same length and follow the same pattern of meter and rhyme
Term
Refrain
Definition
A word, phrase, line, or group of lines repeated regularly in a poem, usually at the end of each stanza
Term
Poetic Foot
Definition
consists of one stressed and one unstressed syllable
Term
Meter
Definition
A generally regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry
Term
Assonance
Definition
The repetition of similar vowel sounds, usually close together, in a group of words
Term
Consonance
Definition
(Also known as Half Rhyme or Slant Rhyme.) Consonance occurs in poetry when words appearing at the ends of two or more verses have similar final consonant sounds but have final vowel sounds that differ, as with "stuff" and "off." (Compare with assonance.)
Term
Onomatopoeia
Definition
The use of a word whose sound in some degree imitates or suggests its meaning. The names of some birds are onomatopoetic, imitating the cry of the bird named. For instance, cuckoo, whippoorwill, owl, crow
Term
Rhyme
Definition
The repetition of sounds in two or more words or phrases that usually appear close to each other in a poem. For example: river/shiver, song/long, leap/deep. If the rhyme occurs at the ends of lines, it is called end rhyme
Term
Rhyme Scheme
Definition
The pattern of rhymes in a poem. The rhyme scheme is indicated by a different letter of the alphabet for each new rhyme of the stanza
Term
Iambic Pentameter
Definition
The most common verse line in English poetry. It consists of five verse feet, with each foot an iamb-that is, an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable
Term
Tercet
Definition
poem consisting of 3 line stanzas
Term
Sestet
Definition
The last six lines of a Petrarchan sonnet
Term
Octet
Definition
first eight lines of a Petrarchan sonnet
Term
Couplet
Definition
Two consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme
Term
Heroic Couplet
Definition
Two consecutive lines of rhyming poetry that are written in iambic pentameter and that contain a complete thought
Term
Blank Verse
Definition
Verse written in unrhymed iambic pentameter, where each line usually contains ten syllables and every other syllable is stressed
Term
Free Verse
Definition
Poetry that has no fixed meter or pattern and that depends on natural speech rhythms. Free verse may rhyme or not rhyme; its lines may be of different lengths; and like natural speech, it may switch suddenly from one rhythm to another
Term
Sonnet
Definition
A fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in rhymed iambic pentameter (in lines of ten syllables with a stress on every other syllable)
Term
Petrarchan Sonnet
Definition
Original Italian sonnet form in which the sonnet's rhyme scheme divides the poem's 14 lines into two parts, an octet (first eight lines) and a sestet (last six lines). There are 10 syllables per line
Term
Shakespearean Sonnet
Definition
A fourteen-line lyric poem consisting of three quatrains (four line stanza) and a concluding couplet (two rhyming lines). The Shakespearean, or English, sonnet was NOT invented by William Shakespeare, but is named for him because he is its most famous practitioner. Its rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef gg
Term
Scansion
Definition
any system of representing more or less conventional poetic rhythms by visual symbols for purposes of metrical analysis and criticism; it does not make rhythm: it reveals and simplifies it by translating it from a temporal into a spatial dimension
Term
Tragedy
Definition
a form of drama exciting the emotions of pity and fear. Its action should be single and complete, presenting a reversal of fortune, involving persons renowned and of superior attainments,and it should be written in poetry embellished with every kind of artistic expression
Term
Comedy
Definition
Physical and energetic; it is tied up in rebirth and renewal; absence of pain and emotional reactions; the behavior of the characters presented in comedy is ludicrous and sometimes absurd; results in “correction” of behaviors
Term
Melodrama
Definition
drama of disaster, profound sentiment, agonizing situations, and usually happy endings
Term
Tragicomedy
Definition
the most life-like of all of the genres; non-judgmental and ends with no absolutes; focuses on character relationships and shows society in a state of continuous flux; a mix of comedy and tragedy side by side
Term
Carpa
Definition
a genre of performance that included skits, puppet shows, political satire, and dance, and was performed in tents
Term
Microaggression
Definition
Daily, subtle acts of violence (racism, sexism, ageism, heterosexism, etc.)
Term
Racial Thinking
Definition
a type of microaggression; the belief that some groups are predisposed to possessing aptitude in certain areas based on race. Does not imply that one group is superior to another.
Racism: The belief that race accounts for superiority of one over another; discrimination based on this belief
Term
Intraracial Racism
Definition
The personal conscious or subconscious acceptance of the dominant society's racist views, stereotypes and biases of one's ethnic group
Supporting users have an ad free experience!