Literary Elements
Characterization
Narrator
Point of View
Sentence Structure
100

What is setting?

Story's time and place
100

Antagonist 

The villan/bad guy in the story 

100

reliable narrator 

tells the truth

100

1st person

I, me, us, our

Narrator's direct POV

100

simple 

He went to the store.

200

Perspective

The point of view from which the story is told

200

Protagonist

The main character/good guy in the story

200

unreliable narrator

can't be trusted because they have a distorted view of reality/lies to us or to herself

200

2nd person

you, your, yours

Rarely used in books, novels

200

compound 

He went to the store, and he got candy.
300

Conflict

Main problem in the story
300
Foil

The protagonist's close friend who is the opposite/very different from him/her

300

stream of consiousnes 

a type of writing that flows endlessly and naturally, like your inner monologue/thinking 

300

3rd person limited

he, she, they

We know what one character thinking/feeling
300

complex

When he went to the store, he got candy.

400

Symbolism

when a specific object represents an idea

400

Flat character 

Only has one trait, not fully developed
400

direct characteriation

we are told directly what the character is like,

"He's a mean guy"

400
3rd person objective

he, she, they

We only know character's actions and dialogues, not what's going on inside their heads 

400

compound-complex

When he went to the store, he got candy, and the cash register lady smiled at him.

500

Theme

The main idea/deeper message in the story 

500

Round

Fully developed character will multiple traits

500

indirect characterization 

we are told indirectly what the character is like, we have to read between the lines using STEAL method

500

3rd person omniscient 

We know what ALL characters thinking and feeling

500

complex with a subordinator in the middle 

He got candy when he went to the store.