Characters
Ethos, Pathos, Logos
Literary Devices
Extras
Animal Farm
100

The villain of the story or the character who is working against the hero

Antagonist

100

A method of persuasive speaking and writing developed by Aristotle.

Rhetoric

100

“It cost me an arm and a leg,” is an example of this

Idiom

100

A work that ridicules the shortcomings of specific people or institutions as an attempt to bring about change.

Satire

100

An imaginary community or society that possesses highly desirable or nearly perfect qualities for its citizens.

Utopia

200

A protagonist who has numerous flaws but still wins the heart or sympathy of the reader

Anti-hero

200

A tool of rhetoric that appeals to readers’ logic or reason

Logos

200

“The goalie is a brick wall,” is an example of this

Metaphor

200

A work that makes fun of another work by imitating some aspect of the original piece’s style

Parody

200

A fictional community or society that is undesirable or frightening.

Dystopia

300

The hero of the story/the character that the audience is rooting for

Protagonist

300

A tool of rhetoric that convinces the reader that the writer is a knowledgeable, trustworthy source of information

Ethos

300

“The snowflakes whispered as they fell,” is an example of this

Personification

300

A decrepancy between expectation and reality

Irony

300

A story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one. A metaphor that continues beyond the first comparison sentence. Animal Farm is an example of this for the issues with socialist societies.

Allegory / Extended Metaphor

400

A character who serves as a direct contrast to another character as a device to emphasize the qualities of the main character.

Foil

400

A tool of rhetoric that appeals to readers’ emotions

Pathos

400

"I've told you a million times!" is an example of this

Hyperbole

400

The dictionary definition of a word

Denotation

400

The four economic / government systems discussed for Animal Farm.

Capitalism, Socialism, Communism, Totalitarianism

500
The ways an author reveals information about a character

Direct Characterization and Indirect Characterization

500

Ethos, Logos, Pathos are all Aristotle's Rhetorical ------

Appeals

500

Hearts for love or lightbulbs for ideas are examples of this

Symbolism

500

Other meanings or associations of a word that often aren’t found in a dictionary; culture or society has created this type of definition over time.

Connotation

500

The father of communism who would later inspire George Orwell in the allegorical character of Old Major.

Karl Marx 

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