Terms
Terms
Terms
Terms
Terms
100

Coming of Age

 Character reaching a transition or turning point in life.

100

Flashback

refer to events pror to the play to make sense of things.

100

Stage vs. Screen

when we watch something like a movie version of the play that has sir anthony hopkins, when you see a movie version there wil be differences.

100

Epistolary

Epistolary comes from a Greek word, epistolē, which means “letter.” Epistolary is a literary genre pertaining to letters, in which writers use letters, journals, and diary entries in their works, or they tell their stories or deliver messages through a series of letters.

100

Dialect

dialect is (linguistics) a variety of a language (specifically, often a spoken variety) that is characteristic of a particular area, community or  group, often with relatively minor differences in vocabulary, style, spelling and pronunciation.

200

Symbolism

Objects seasons time of year that will have deeper meaning.

200

Socio Economic Commentary

Money, what does a piece of lit suggest or imply about money power weath givien the setting.

200

Biographical Criticism

analyzes a writer's biography to show the relationship between the author's life and their works of literature.

200

Linear

the order in which events are portrayed corresponds to the order in which they occur.

200

Point of View

Who perspective from the stoy that is being told from. In A&P the main character is telling the story or speaker can tell the stroy (someone who is not in the story but kind of like watching).

300

Exposition

Break the flow of linear structure to stop and explain something.

300

Stage Directions

When reading a play there will be brief notes that will talk about one performer how they eist or enter the stage or stomps away furiously.  This is a plan for a perfmoance.

300

Coming of Age

focuses on the growth of a protagonist from youth to adulthood

300

Non-Linear

where events are portrayed, for example, out of chronological order or in other ways where the narrative does not follow the direct causality pattern of the events featured

300

Structure

Structure means 'composed of parts' or 'the organization of something,' when referring to literature.

400

Internal Dioaglouge

Internal diouge on stage is when you are talking about aside, other people on stage ethier freeze or ignore one character and they speak to the audience to explain hoe they feel internally.  Or put them in darkness.

400

Script

What yu are reading is the plan for the prefmrance who says what and who does what.  Tape on stage to not go out of bounds.

400

Symbolism

Symbolism is a literary device that uses symbols, be they words, people, maprks, locations, or abstract ideas to represent something beyond the literal meaning.  EX: DOVE WOULD REPRESENT PEACE.

400

Historical Context

 (what is going around during this time in history):THE WHERE AND WHEN

EX: Yellow Wallpaper: Thought if it was set in todays time we might think it is different because womens roles were different from now an before but understanding how society was back then helios understand the story better.

400

Style

 is the way in which an author writes and/or tells a story. It’s what sets one author apart from another and creates the “voice” that audiences hear when they read.

500

Foreshadowing

hints of what will come later.

500

Director’s decision

Creative lience.  When we watch various prediction we will notice there is uttle and no so subtle desions of who they cast, mabey lines or scnes they omitted or changning the lines.

500

Socio-Economics

Socioeconomic status is the social standing or class of an individual or group. It is often measured as a combination of education, income and occupation.  WE CAN THINK OF IT IN THE LESSON.

500

Diction

clarity of word choice, and presentation of said words.

500

Motif

 any recurring element that has symbolic significance in a story. Through its repetition, a motif can help produce other narrative (or literary) aspects such as (convaying) a theme or mood.

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