Lit Devices 1
Lit Devices 2
Lit Devices 3
Lit Devices 4
Literary Theories
100

The main character in a literary work, usually thought of as the "good guy"

Protagonist

100

Comparing two unknown items in order to illustrate a point (does not use the words "like" or "as" - that is a simile)

Metaphor

100

A brief story about an interesting, amusing, or strange event that is told to entertain or to make a point.

Anecdote

100

The use of clues to suggest events that have yet to occur

Foreshadowing

100

The author's intended meaning is the only valid interpretation. The reader identifies thsi meaning by examining the genre, the language, and the context.

Structuralism

200

A character or force that is in conflict the the main character

Antagonist

200

A section of a literary work that interrupts the chronological presentation of events to relate an event from an earlier time

Flashback

200

The perspective, or vantage point, from which a story is told

Point of View

200

Used when the narrator of a story relates the inner thoughts and feelings of only one chracter, and everything is iewed from this character's perspective

1st Person Limited POV

200

The author may have had one intended meaning in mind, but other meanings are also valid; other meanings may have been subconscious. Words may have various meanings, and the meaning associated with the word will often change how the reader views the work.

Deconstruction

300

A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work

Theme

300

A contradiction between what is stated and what was meant, or between what is expected to happen and what actually happens.

irony

300

Used when a writer reveals a character through his or her words, thoughts, actions, descriptions of the character's appearance or background, what other characters say about the character, or the ways in which other characters react to the character

Indirect Characterization

300

A narrator who nows what is happening in the lives of all character; knows the future

Omniscient Narrator

300

Readers may acknowledge that other people have different interpretations, but, due to their life experiences and politics, they generally believe their interpretation to be the "correct" interpretation.

Reader Response

400

The "aha moment" in a story; a sudden revelation or flash of insight

Epiphany

400

A struggle betwen opposing forces, internal or external

Conflict

400

The act of creating and developing a character

Characterization

400

Used when a writer simply states the character's traits

Direct characterization

400

This theory searches for where the texts perpetuate the power struggle of patriarchy's sexist ideal: the belief that women have been defined by their inadequacy to men. It also often shows women as men's equal, overcoming the patriarchy to assert her own autonomy.

Feminism

500

When an author has one thing stand for or represent something else

Symbolism

500

A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art. Writers often make these to the Bible, Greek and Roman Myths, plays by Shakespeare, and to political and historical events.

Allusion

500

A character who provides contrast to another character

Foil

500

A contradiction between what a character thinks and what the reader or audience knows

Dramatic Irony

500

These critics show the relationship between literature and the social - mainly economic - conditions under which the literature is produced. It often focuses on literary representations of workers and working classes.

Marxism

M
e
n
u