Literary Analysis

    Short Stories/Novel
    Theme – The idea or point of a story formulated as a generalization literature, several themes are evident which reflect and define our society. The dominant ones might be innocence/experience, life/death, appearance/reality, free will/fate, madness/sanity, love/hate, society/individual, known/unknown. Character – Imaginary people created by the writer. Protagonist – Major character at the center of the story.
    • Antagonist – A character or force that opposes the protagonist.
    • Minor character – 0ften provides support and illuminates the protagonist.
    • Static character – A character who remains the same.
    • Dynamic character – A character who changes in some important way.
    • Characterization – The means by which writers reveal character.
    • Explicit Judgment – Narrator gives facts and interpretive comment.
    • Implied Judgment – Narrator gives description; reader make the judgment.
    Look for: Connections, links, and clues between and about characters. Ask yourself what the function and significance of each character is. Make this determination based upon the character’s history, what the reader is told (and not told), and what other characters say about themselves and others.
    Plot – The arrangement of ideas and/or incidents that make up a story.
    • Causality – One event occurs because of another event.
    • Foreshadowing – A suggestion of what is going to happen.
    • Suspense – A sense of worry established by the author.
    • Conflict – Struggle between opposing forces.
    • Exposition – Background information regarding the setting, characters, plot.
    • Complication or Rising Action – Intensification of conflict.
    • Crisis – Turning point; moment of great tension that fixes the action.
    • Resolution/Denouement – The way the story turns out.
    Structure – The design or form of the completed action. Often provides clues to character and action and sometimes even to the author’s intentions.
    Look for: Repeated elements in action, gesture, dialogue, description, as well as shifts in direction, focus, time, place, etc.
    Setting – The place or location of the action, the setting provides the historical and cultural context for characters. It often can symbolize the emotional state of characters.
    Point of View – Again, the point of view can sometimes indirectly establish the author’s intentions. Point of view pertains to who tells the story and how it is told.
    • Narrator – The person telling the story.
    • First-person – Narrator participates in action but sometimes has limited knowledge/vision.
    • Objective – Narrator is unnamed/unidentified (a detached observer). Does not assume character’s perspective and is not a character in the story. The narrator reports on events and lets the reader supply the meaning.
    • Omniscient – All-knowing narrator (multiple perspectives). The narrator takes us into the character and can evaluate a character for the reader (editorial omniscience). When a narrator allows the reader to make his or her own judgments from the action of the characters themselves, it is called neutral omniscience.
    • Limited omniscient – All-knowing narrator about one or two characters, but not all.
    Language and Style – Style is the verbal identity of a writer, oftentimes based on the author’s use of diction (word choice) and syntax (the order of words in a sentence). A writer’s use of language reveals his or her tone, or the attitude toward the subject matter.
    Irony – A contrast or discrepancy between one thing and another.
    • Verbal irony – We understand the opposite of what the speaker says.
    • Dramatic Irony – Discrepancy between what characters know and what readers know.
    • Ironic Vision – An overall tone of irony that pervades a work, suggesting how the writer views the characters.
    Figurative Language – The use of words to suggest meanings beyond the literal. There are a number of figures of speech. Some of the more common ones are:
    • Metaphor – Making a comparison between unlike things without the use of a verbal clue (such as “like” or “as”).
    • Simile – Making a comparison between unlike things, using “like” or “as”.
    • Hyperbole – Exaggeration
    • Personification – Endowing inanimate objects with human characteristics
    Imagery – A concrete representation of a sense impression, a feeling, or an idea which appeals to one or more of our senses. Look for a pattern of imagery.
    • Tactile imagery – sense of touch.
    • Auditory imagery – sense of hearing.
    • Olfactory imagery – sense of smell.
    • Visual imagery – sense of sight.
    • Gustatory imagery – sense of taste.

     

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