discovering themes
narrative structure
literary devices and concepts
narrative techniques
extra help
100

Three important narrative elements are

plot 

characterization

framing

100

The pacing of a story

the rhythm of the story—how quickly or slowly the actions and events develop and unfold. Authors can vary pacing using a number of techniques

100

implicit

 is understood despite not being clearly stated

100

to convey specific details about a character and reveals a character’s personality 

characterization

100

to ease or reduce

allay

200

Theme

A story’s theme is the central message or universal truth that the author conveys through the characters and plot.

200

The techniques for pacing

detailed description 

dialogue 

scene vs. summary

200

explicit

something that is clearly stated

200

 a straightforward approach in which a character is clearly and explicitly described to reveal what the character is like.

direct characterization

200

 familiar, commonly used character types and situations in stories.

archetypes 

300

 The Central idea

is an overarching message or truth that is specific to a story.

300

structure to show the relationship between past and present events.

flashback

300

The four important literary devices used in reading and writing 

symbolism 

allusion 

analogy 

onomatopoeia

300

the development of a character using descriptions of his or her actions, thoughts, feelings, motivations, conflicts, and experiences

indirect characterization 

300

explains or clarifies one item in terms of another on a nonliteral level

figurative language

400

A subject

of a text is its topic, or what a text is literally about.

400

It hints at an event or action that has not yet happened in the current storyline.

foreshadowing

400

literary device

are specific structural choices that authors make to add depth to their writing, to leave sections of a text ambiguous and open to readers’ interpretations, and to affect their readers in powerful ways.

400

 the author’s attitude toward a subject he or she is writing about, as well as the author’s approach to the audience, through literary techniques such as word choice, point of view, and characterization. 

tone

400

The four types of figurative language 

Simile

Metaphor

Personification

Hyperbole

500

determining the central ideas and theme


Both subjects and central ideas are important in determining themes. Readers can first determine which subjects are developed in depth within a text. Those topics can then point readers toward what the central ideas are.

500

The narrative structure 

is the order in which literary elements are placed, and artistic interpretation enables the same story or idea to be interpreted in multiple ways

500

An inference

implicit: requires reader to read in between the lines 

explicit: has evidence and other clues to arrive at deeper implied meanings and intent. 

500

the use of written or spoken words to convey a story

narration

500

when an author uses words in a way that implies the opposite of their literal meaning

Irony