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Literary Terms

Terms needed to understand short stories, novels, plays, and narrative poetry

AB
charactera person or animal who takes part in the action of a literary work
main characterthe most important character in the story
antagonista character or force in conflict with a main character; often the "bad guy"
protagonistthe main character in a literary work; often the "good guy"
characterizationthe act of creating and developing a character; what the author writes to develop a character's personality
conflicta struggle between opposing forces
internal conflicta conflict that takes place WITHIN THE MIND of a character
internal conflict exampleIndividual vs. self
external conflictconflict that occurs when a character struggles against some OUTSIDE FORCE
external conflict examplesIndividual vs. Individual; Individual vs. Nature; Individual vs. Society; Individual vs. Fate (supernatural); Individual vs. Technology
settingthe time and place of the action
plotthe sequence of events in a story
plot steps1)Exposition, 2)Initial Event, 3)Rising Action, 4)Climax, 5)Falling Action, 6)Resolution
expositionintroduces setting, characters, and the basic situation
initial eventproblem is introduced
rising actionevents leading to the climax
climaxhigh point of interest or suspense; when things come to a 'head'
falling actionevents after the climax leading to the resolution
resolutionsolution to the problem & ending of the story
themea central message, concern, or purpose in a literary work
moodthe feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage
suspensea feeling of anxious uncertainty about the outcome of events in a literary work
surprise endinga conclusion that is unexpected
narratora speaker or character who tells a story, may be first person or third person
ironythe general name given to literary techniques that involve surprising, interesting, or amusing CONTRADICTIONS
morala lesson taught by a literary work
motivationa reason that explains or partially explains a character's thoughts, feelings, actions, or speech
point of view (POV)the perspective from which a story is told
First Person POVtold by the narrator who is a character in the story
Third Person POVtold by someone who is NOT a character in the story
flashbacka section of a literary work that interrupts the sequence of events to relate an event that occurred at an earlier time
foreshadowthe use of clues that suggest/hint at events that have yet to occur
dialectthe form of a language spoken by people in a particular region or group; example: "Y'all" used in the South US & "Youse guys" used in New York/New Jersey to mean "everyone here"
dialoguea conversation between characters; signalled by quotation marks in a written story


Maui Preparatory Academy
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