English Lit. AS Unit 1 Aspects of Narrative
Terminology
- Created by: H
- Created on: 27-05-10 13:25
A & B
Alliteration: 2 or more words of a word group placed together with same letter
Allusion: a reference/mention of something, either directly or by implication
Antagonist: a person in a text who is opposed to, struggles against, or competes with another
Antithesis: opposition/contrast
Assonance: rhyme in which the same vowel sounds are used with different consonants in the stressed syllables of the rhyming words
Bathos: descent from the exalted to the commonplace
C
Characterisation: the way an author creates a character and why
Chronological order: sequence of events as they happen
Colloquial: informal
Consonance: correspondence/harmony of sounds
Context: circumstances surrounding a text which affect how it is read and understood, affecting interpretation
Cultural stereotype: characters' features that we are conditioned to recognise as having a certain meaning
D & E
Declarative: sentence type- a statement
Dialogue: conversation between characters
Direct speech: when quotation marks are used to present the actual words of a character
Enjambment: the continuation of a sentence from one line or couplet of a poem to the next with no pause
F
First person narrator: story told through the voice of one of the characters
Foreshadow: prediction of future events
Form: aspects of a text that enable it to be labelled as a certain type within its genre
Free speech: speech that is not directly attributed
Fricative: sound characterised by audible friction produced by forcing the breath through a constricted or partially obstructed passage in the vocal tract
G & H
Genre: type of text- can be labelled due to content/style/audience etc
Hyperbole: exaggeration
I
Ideology: attitudes and values that a text contains
Idiolect: individual way of speaking
Imagery: the formation of mental images
Imperative: sentence type- using a verb as a command
Indirect speech: reported by the narrator, giving a version of the words spoken rather than the words themselves
Irony: the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning
J & K & L
Juxtaposition: placing words/ideas close together or side by side, especially for comparison or contrast
Kinesics: the study of body movements, gestures, facial expressions, etc, as a means of communication
Lexis: vocabulary choice
Litotes: deliberate understatement
M
Meta-narrative: a narrative told to justify another story, especially involving artifice; a story about oneself that provides a view of one's own experiences
Metaphor: the transfer of meaning when one thing is described as another
Metre: repeated units of rhythm in poetry which are measured according to 'feet'
Metrical foot: unit of rhythm which is named according to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables
Monosyllabic: words containing one syllable
N & O
Narrative: involves how events and causes are shown and various methods used by the author/poet
Non-fluency features: informal features used in spoken word
Noun: an object/person/place
Onomatopoeia: the formation of a word by imitation of a sound made by or associated with its referent
Oxymoron: combination of contradictory words
P
Pathetic fallacy: the endowment of nature, inanimate objects, etc. with human traits and feelings
Pathos: the quality of power in an actual life experience or in literature, music, speech or other forms of expression, of evoking a feeling of pity or compassion
Personification: the attribution of a personal nature or character to inanimate objects or abstract notions
Phonology: the use of sounds in texts for effect
Plosives: sounds characterised by release in a plosion, explosive
Plot: chain of causes and circumstances that connect events and place them in relationship with each other
Polysyllabic: words containing more than one syllable
P
Post-modernism: any number of trends or movements in the arts and literature developing in the 1970s in reaction to or rejection of the dogma, principles, or practices of established modernism
Prolepsis: foreshadowing of future events
Pronoun: grammatical word class such as I, you, he, this, who, what
Protagonist: the leading character, hero or heroine of a drama or other literary work
R
Realism: a manner of treating subject manner that presents a careful description of everyday life
Register: level of formality/informality of voice/narrative
Representations: characters and events as constructs, not real
Rhetoric: the art or science of literary uses of language in prose or verse, including the figures of speech
Rhyming couplets: when lines of verse rhyme in the pattern of aa, bb, cc
S
Semantic field: a group of words connected by concept/theme
Sibilance: a group of words that all begin with the letter s
Simile: when one things is described as being as or like another
Stichomythia: frequent snappy dialogue between characters that causes tension
Structure: how parts of a text work together to form a whole
Story: all events that will be shown in a text
Symbolic: symbols which involve the reader to make certain connections not directly stated
T
Third person narrative: story told through the voice of the narrator who is not one of the characters in the story
Tragedy: a dramatic composition, often in verse or in play form, dealing with a serious or sombre theme, typically that of a great person destined through a flaw of character or conflict with some overpowering force, as fate or society, to downfall or destruction
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