Literary Terms Allegory: Is a Form of Narrative in Which People, Places

Literary Terms Allegory: Is a Form of Narrative in Which People, Places

Literary Terms Allegory: is a form of narrative in which people, places and happenings have hidden or symbolic meaning. Example: Animal Farm by George Orwell is a book in which a farm governed by animals stands to represent the communist regime of Stalin in Russia before the Second World War. Allusions: A reference to another literary work or piece of art that the reader should understand in order to make connections. Example: “I was surprised his nose did not grow like Pinocchio’s after he told that lie.” This refers to the story of Pinocchio where his nose grew whenever he told a lie. It is a reference from The Adventures of Pinocchio, written by Carlo Collodi. Flashback: is a literary device that allows writers to show their audience specific events that happened before the current action of the story. Genre: is a category system that literature falls into based on specific conventions that develop to characterize the differences. Example: Western, Romance, Science Fiction. Irony: can be verbal, situational, sarcastic, or dramatic. This is when the meaning, situation or action is one thing but means something different. Example: “The name of Britain’s biggest dog is Tiny.” Satire: is a type of literacy device where an author ridicules specific people, groups, or some aspect of society. Setting: is where the story takes place. Example: New York City Symbol: is a concrete or physical object that represents an abstract concept. Example: A flag represents freedom. Theme: is an abstraction that represents the central idea of the story. Example: Greed, Jealousy, Sadness. Narrator: tells the story either in the first, second, or third person point of view. Climax: is the most exciting part of a story where all the main conflicts come together. Foreshadowing: is when the author hints at actions that will occur in the future. Metaphor: is a figure of speech that compares two unlike things. Example: Time, you thief! Onomatopoeia: words that describe a sound that an object makes. Example: The snake hissed. Personification: is when the authors give human traits to animals or a lifeless object. Example: The water sang ‘splish splash.’ Imagery: is a writer’s vivid description that helps readers visualize. .

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