Historical Context
Novels & Plays
Literary Elements
Poetry
Rhetoric
200

the "grand historical narrative of Western civilization" starts here

Ancient Greece/Athens

200

The author of Death of a Salesman

Arthur Miller

200

figurative exaggeration as a means of amplification

hyperbole

200

repeated consonant sounds

consonance

200

a comparison of something familiar to the audience with something unfamiliar to the audience for the purpose of explaining

analogy

400

a hypothetical time before the development of civilized society

state of nature

400

The name of the king's castle in Macbeth

Dunsinane

400

the feeling created by a literary work (in the reader)

mood

400

words that appear to rhyme in spelling but do not rhyme when pronounced

eye rhyme

400

an attempt to persuade by characterizing the speaker as credible and trustworthy

appeal to ethos

600

the process of pricing something for sale which was previously not bought or sold

commodification

600

The name of Okonkwo's mother's clan

Mbanta

600

a humorous way of criticizing a person, idea, or institution's faults or weaknesses; a work which uses this type of criticism

satire

600

the presence of punctuation at the end of a line of poetry

end-stopped

600

a brief story used to illustrate a point or claim

anecdote

800

beyond the physical world

metaphysical

800

One of the ingredients in the witches' cauldron in Macbeth

eye of newt, etc.
800

the possibility of interpreting something in more than one way

ambiguity

800

to address someone or something that is not present

apostrophe

800

to signify an associated feeling, mood, or idea in addition to the ordinary meaning

connote / connotation

1000

a voluntary agreement among individuals to secure their rights, safety, and welfare by acknowledging an authority, such as a government, and abiding by its rules

social contract

1000

The name of the play that Holden Caulfield sees with Sally Hayes in The Catcher in the Rye

The Lunts

1000

a repeated pattern in a work of art

motif

1000

the structure of a sonnet

14 lines; the first 8 present a problem, and the final 6 present a solution

1000

to limit the scope of a claim; to specify which cases or kinds a claim does/doesn't apply to

qualify