Vocab Definitions
Vocab Etymology
ARITS Characters
ARITS Plot
Lecture Notes
100

A universal idea, lesson, or message explored throughout a work of literature

Theme

100

the Greek word meaning “a prize; the subject of an argument”

Thema

100

The protagonist's name

Walter Younger

100

The protagonist wants to buy this with the money coming in

A liquor store

100

The literary analysis that focuses on form, diction, and unity

New Criticism

200

The representation of the traits, motives, and psychology of a character in a narrative

Characterization

200

The Greek word meaning “token, watchword, ticket, a permit, license”

Symbolon

200

The name of the protagonist's younger sister

Benethea (Bennie) Younger

200

The protagonist's mother wants to spend the money on this

A house

200

A literary idea or lesson that is ALWAYS a statement

Theme

300

A literary device in which a writer uses one thing—usually a physical object or phenomenon—to represent something more abstract

Symbolism

300

 The Greek word meaning “a transfer”

Metaphora

300

The name of the protagonist's wife

Ruth Younger

300

The protagonist's wife want her mother-in-law to spend the money on this

A trip around the world

300

When we are talking about a word's commonly used meaning we are referring to this.

The word's connotation

400

An element or idea that recurs throughout a work of literature

Motif

400

The Latin word meaning “moving, to move”

Motivus

400

The name of the protagonist's son

Travis Younger

400

The Younger family gets the $10,000 dollars from this

Their father's life insurance 

400

The mistake readers make when they are concerned with what the author thinks

The Intentional Fallacy

500

A comparison that does not use like or as

Metaphor

500

The Greek word meaning “symbol or imprint on the soul”

Kharaktēr

500

The name of the protagonist's mother

Mama (Lena)

500

The protagonist does this for a living (job)

He is a limousine driver

500

The mistake readers make when they are concerned about their own emotional response to a text

The Affective Fallacy