
<p> Elements of Literature and Short Stories</p><p>Narrator: The person telling the story</p><p>Characters: People or animals who take part in a story’s action. Characters are directed by motivation. </p><p>Motivations: – the reason or reasons that explain why characters act as they do * Intellectual (thinking), emotional (feelings), physical (health)</p><p>Character Traits: traits or qualities that help the reader understand the character and their actions. Traits may include: intelligence, stubbornness, or dependability etc… Characterization: the way a writer reveals a character’s personality and qualities. Direct characterization: The writer describes the character Indirect characterization: The writer reveals the character’s qualities and personality through speech and actions. Dynamic character: The character changes throughout the story. Flat/Static character: The character(s) do not change throughout the story. Theme: General idea, message, or insight about life that a work of literature reveals. Implied theme: suggested or hinted at through what is happening with the characters. Stated theme: expressed directly by the author</p><p>Setting: Time and place of a story. Can include year, time of day, weather. It serves as the background for the plot and creates a feeling or atmosphere.</p><p>Protagonist: A main character in a story.</p><p>Antagonist: A character that opposes the protagonist. Point of View: The vantage point from which a story is told. First Person – a character in a story is telling the story and the reader experiences the story through that character. (I, me, my) Second Person – The author is talking directly to the reader (you) Third Person – The story is told by an outside person and not a character in a story. o Limited – The reader knows the thoughts and feelings of one character. o Omniscient – The reader knows the thoughts and feelings of more than one character in the story. o Objective – No thoughts or feelings are revealed.</p><p>Mood: The feeling the author creates for the reader with choice of words or diction.</p><p>Tone: The attitude the writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience.</p><p>Conflict: Struggle between opposing forces or characters Internal conflict: Conflict inside a character – feelings, emotions. o Man vs. self External conflict: Conflict outside a character. o Man vs. man o Man vs. society o Man vs. nature</p><p>Plot: Sequence of events that make up a story. Usually, there are 5 parts. 1. Exposition: Introduces the setting, characters, and situation. 2. Rising Action: Introduces the conflict, or problem. With each “rise” in the conflict, the action increases. 3. Climax: The turning point of a story. Usually the point of highest tension in the story. 4. Falling Action or Denouement: The part of the story after the conflict that lessens the conflict. 5. Resolution: The story’s conclusion.</p><p>Literary Devices: Tools used to enhance writing.</p><p>Foreshadowing: The use of clues of events before they occur.</p><p>Flashback: The placement of a scene within a story that reveals past events.</p><p>Irony: Contrast between expectation and reality. Verbal Irony: contrast between what is said or written and what is meant. Situational Irony: What happens is very different from what the reader or audience expects to happen. Dramatic Irony: The reader or audience knows something that the character does not.</p><p>Dialect: Form of language spoken by people in a particular region or group.</p>
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