A-C
C-F
G-I
I-R
R-Z Category
100
The character who works against the main character and is usually the source of the conflict.
Antagonist
100
The part of the story where setting, characters, and background information is established.
Exposition
100
A category of literature or film like comedy, mystery, tragedy, satire, elegy, romance, and epic.
Genre
100
a figure of speech that refers to one thing by another in order to identify similarities between the two (and therefore define each in relation to one another). A comparison if dissimilar things.
Metaphor
100
A narrative told from the perspective of an outside figure who does not participate directly in the events of a story. This mode uses “he,” “she,” and “it” to describe events and characters.
Third Person
200
The ways individual characters are represented by the narrator or author of a text. This includes descriptions of the characters’ physical appearances, personalities, actions, interactions, and dialogue.
Characterization
200
A work comprised primarily of letters sent and received by its principle characters. This type of novel was particularly popular during the eighteenth century.
Epistolary
200
Exaggeration or overstatement.
Hyperbole
200
The primary character in a text, often positioned as “good” or the character with whom readers are expected to identify.
Protagonist
200
A style of writing that mocks, ridicules, or pokes fun at a person, belief, or group of people in order to challenge them. Often, texts employing this device use sarcasm, irony, or exaggeration to assert their perspective.
Satire
300
When a text references, incorporates, or responds to an earlier work (including literature, art, music, film, event, etc).
Allusion
300
According to Taafe, “Literally, in Latin, the ‘god from the machine’; a deity in Greek and Roman drama who was brought in by stage machinery to intervene in the action; hence, any character, event, or device suddenly introduced to resolve the conflict” (43).
Deus Ex Machina
300
Typically refers to saying one thing and meaning the opposite, often to shock audiences and emphasize the importance of the truth.
Irony
300
The perspective (visual, interpretive, bias, etc) a text takes when presenting its plot and narrative. For instance, an author might write a narrative from a specific character’s understanding of the action, which means that that character is our narrative and readers experience events through his or her eyes.
Point of View
300
The way an author conveys his/her attitude about particular characters and subject matter. In poetry, it is often called “voice.” It is the feeling the author brings to the piece or the attitude the author takes (toward the subject, audience, or character[s]).
Tone
400
A protagonist of a story who embodies none of the qualities typically assigned to traditional heroes and heroines. Not to be confused with the antagonist of a story, this character is a protagonist whose failings are typically used to humanize him or her and convey a message about the reality of human existence.
Anti-hero
400
The “falling action” of a narrative, when the climax and central conflicts are resolved and a resolution is found. In a play, this is typically the last act and in a novel it might include the final chapters.
Denouement
400
Mental pictures or other sense engagement that a reader experiences with a passage of literature.
Imagery
400
NAME THE LITERARY TERM: 'Pink is what red looks like when it kicks off its shoes and lets its hair down. …Pink is as laid back as beige, but while beige is dull and bland, pink is laid back with attitude.'
Personification
400
Comprised of an author’s diction, syntax, tone, characters, and other narrative techniques, this is used to describe the way an author uses language to convey his or her ideas and purpose in writing.
Style
500
a literary mode that attempts to convert abstract concepts, values, beliefs, or historical events into characters or other tangible elements in a narrative. Examples include, Gulliver’s Travels, The Faerie Queene, Pilgrim’s Progress, and Paradise Lost.
Allegory
500
NAME THE LITERARY TERM: In many medieval literature pieces, a raven, a wolf, eagle or vulture appear and because these creatures scavenge bodies of fallen warriors, they allow the reader to predict a battle is about to begin. So, an omen or que concerning later action.
Foreshadowing
500
Beginning in “the middle of things,” or when an author begins a text in the midst of action. This often functions as a way to both incorporate the reader directly into the narrative and secure his or her interest in the narrative that follows.
In media res
500
a narrative work or writing style that mocks or mimics another genre or work. Typically, these works exaggerate and emphasize elements from the original work in order to ridicule, comment on, or criticize its message.
Parody
500
According to Baldick, this is “a salient abstract idea that emerges from a literary work’s treatment of its subject-matter; or a topic recurring in a number or literary works” (Baldick 258). .
Theme