Thursday, February 6, 2014

Lit Terms #5

Lit Terms #5
Parallelism: the principle in sentence structure that states elements of equal function should have equal form
Parody: an imitation of mimicking of a composition or of the style of a well-known artist. 
Pathos: the ability in literature to call forth feelings of pity, compassion, and/or sadness. 
Pedantry:  a display of learning for its own sake. 
Personification: a figure of speech attributing human qualities to inanimate objects or abstract ideas. 
Plot: a plan or scheme to accomplish a purpose.  
Poignant:  eliciting sorrow or sentiment. 
Point of View: the attitude unifying any oral or written argumentation; in description, the physical point from which the observer views what he is describing. 
Postmodemism: literature characterized by experimentation, irony, nontraditional forms, multiple  meanings, playfulness and a blurred boundary between real and imaginary 
Prose: the ordinary form of spoken and written language; language that does not have a regular rhyme pattern.
Protagonist: the central character in a work of fiction; opposes antagonist 
Pun:  play on words; the humorous use of a word emphasizing different meanings or applications. 
Purpose: the intended result wished by an author. 
Realism: writing about the ordinary aspects of life in a straightforward manner to reflect life as it actually is.
Refrain: a phrase or verse recurring at intervals in a poem or song; chorus.
Requiem: any chant, dirge, hymn, or musical service for the dead. 
Resolution: point in a literary work at which the chief dramatic complication is worked out; denouement.
Restatement: idea repeated for emphasis.
Rhetoric: use of language, both written and verbal in order to persuade.
Rhetorical Question: question suggesting its own answer or not requiring an answer; used in argument or persuasion.
Rising Action: plot build up, caused by conflict and complications, advancement towards climax.
Romanticism: movement in western culture beginning in the eighteenth and peaking in the nineteenth century as a revolt against Classicism; imagination was valued over reason and fact.
Satire: ridicules or condemns the weakness and wrong doings of individuals, groups, institutions, or humanity in general.
Scansion: the analysis of verse in terms of meter.
Setting:  the time and place in which events in a short story, novel, play, or narrative poem occur.

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