L.E.T.'s do this!
It's in the past.
Bro, cabulary?
That's Got Character
Wild Card
100

Something that stands for or suggests something larger and more complex than what it actually is.

What is a symbol?

100

Elizabethan poet and playwright who wrote at least 37 plays and over 150 poems.

Who is William Shakespeare?

100

This structural technique occurs when a poetic line moves onto the next without terminal punctuation. It is often used to maintain a poem's rhythm or to create a specific pacing that reflects the speaker's state of mind

Enjambment

100

This character, often mistakenly called by his creator's name, is a "man of parts" who projects the perils of a man seeking to play God.

Who is Frankenstein's Monster? (Or Creature)

100
Two of the more well-known forms of Sonnets
What are English and Petrarchan?
200

An indirect reference to a person, event, statement, theme or work made to enrich meaning through the connotations they carry.

What is an allusion?

200
A philosophical theory or approach which emphasizes the existence of the individual person as a free and responsible agent determining their own development through acts of the will.

What is existentialism?

200

A phrase, line, or group of lines repeated at intervals throughout a poem, often at the end of a stanza. This "patterned" repetition serves to emphasize core themes or shift the poem's emotional weight.

Refrain

200

In Invisible Man, this manipulative leader recruits the narrator into the Brotherhood but ultimately uses him for political purposes.

Brother Jack

200

A story or poem that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one.

What is an allegory?

300

Harsh, unpleasant, or discordant sounds.

What is cacophony?

300

A 19th-century (1800 to 1860) literary movement emphasizing emotion and imagination, rather than logic and scientific thought in response to the Enlightenment.

What is Romanticism?

300

In drama, this occurs when a character speaks directly to the audience or another character while being "unheard" by others on stage. It is a critical tool for revealing a character's internal conflict or private motivations that contradict their public actions

[aside]

300

In Crime and Punishment, this character represents moral redemption and encourages Raskolnikov to confess.

Sonia (Sofya Marmeladov)

300

"Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all

                Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."

[name that poem]

Ode on a Grecian Urn

400
A statement that seems self-contradictory or nonsensical on the surface but that, upon closer examination, may express an underlying truth.
What is a paradox?
400

A 20th century literary genre that often involves supernatural phenomena in an otherwise real-world or mundane setting.

What is magical realism?

400

This figure of speech uses a part of something to represent the whole (e.g., "all hands on deck"). In literature, writers use this to focus the reader's attention on specific, significant details that stand in for a larger, more complex reality.

Synecdoche

400

This character stands alone in a high-stakes dramatic situation, using "relevant and sufficient evidence" to challenge the "overarching thesis" of his peers and maintain his "pride and self-respect" against a majority opinion.

Juror 8 (12 Angry Men)

400

Associated with thinkers like Jacques Derrida, this school of literary theory argues that language is unstable and texts contain internal contradictions that undermine fixed meaning.

Poststructuralism (Deconstruction)

500

A long speech that a character gives to the audience to express their deepest thoughts and emotions.

What is a soliloquy?

500

A novelist whose parents were well-known political philosophers and feminist activists.

Who is Mary Shelley?

500

a form of extended metaphor that often appears in poetry, developing complex comparisons that present images, concepts, and associations in surprising or paradoxical ways.

Conceit

500

In Crime and Punishment, this calculating character uses Luzhin’s failed scheme to expose his moral corruption and assert his own intellectual dominance.

Arkady Svidrigailov

500

"Ah, love, let us be true

To one another!"

[name that poem and poetic device]

Dover Beach, Apostrophe