Literary Elements 1
Literary Elements 2
Literary Elements 3
Figurative Language
Rhetorical Elements
100

Events that occur after the exposition like Nick dining at Daisy's, meeting Myrtle, and lunching with Gatsby are these events.

rising action

100

Something that represents something else like the green light standing for Gatsby's dream of a future with Daisy.

symbol

100

A character who tries to prevent the protagonist from accomplishing his goal.

antagonist

100

"In his blue gardens men and girls came like moths among whisperings and the champagne and the stars."

simile

100

This occurs when an author uses the same words or phrases more than once.

repetition

200

An extreme exaggeration for effect like Gatsby's car described as having a "monstrous length."

hyperbole

200

The feeling that keeps you wanting to read more like when Daisy and Gatsby are reunited after 5 years.

suspense

200

A character like Daisy who is seen from many angles like wife, mother, friend, and lover.

round character

200

"The boom of the bass drum" or the whistle and snap of the curtains."

onomatopoeia

200

This occurs when an author says the same thing using different words.

restatement

300

A situation that at first seems contradictory, but is actually true like Nick saying he was "within and without simultaneously."

paradox

300

A character like Jordan Baker or Tom Buchanan who remain the same throughout the work.

static character

300

When an author provides hints about what will happen later in the story.

foreshadowing

300

Referring to Wolfsheim's eating as a "ferocious delicacy" is this element.

oxymoron

300

This occurs when an author references another piece of art work, literature, or historical event.

allusion

400

A character like Gatsby who undergoes an enormous change throughout the work

dynamic character

400

This is the way an author feels about his writing.

tone

400

This is the way the author wants his reader to feel about his writing.

mood

400

"What a tale of terror now their turbulency tells."

alliteration

400

This occurs when an author uses the same word at the beginning of phrases, sentences, or clauses.

anaphora

500

When the reader knows more than the characters do, like when we know Gatsby and Daisy are having an affair, but Tom doesn't.

dramatic irony

500

When the reader expects one thing to happen but something else does, like when we think Gatsby is driving, but it is really Daisy.

situational irony

500

When an character states the opposite of what he means like when Montresor tells Fortunato he won't die of a cough.

verbal irony

500

"Hear the mellow wedding bells."

assonance

500

This occurs when an author uses the same words at the end of a phrase, clause, or sentence.

epistrophe