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Elements of Literature Introduction

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Page 1: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Elements of Literature

Introduction

Page 2: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Setting

• Time and place of the action

• View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying the setting?

Page 3: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying
Page 4: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Point of View• First person: told by a character

using “I”. The narrator is a character in the story.

• Third person: told by a nameless narrator. The narrator does not explain the characters’ thoughts and feelings

• Omniscient: author tells story as if he is all-knowing like a god

Page 5: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Mood and Tone

• Mood is the feeling a reader has from a work. Tone is the writer’s attitude toward the subject.

• Listen to Night on Bald Mountain and decide the mood and tone of this work.

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMmfaaiWMEs

Page 6: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Are you right?

• Many people have grown accustomed to hearing Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain during Halloween - it's definitely a dark piece of music. Rightfully so, the story behind Night on Bald Mountain is not one of light nature. Inspired by a short story by the Russian writer, Nikolai Gogol, in which witches would gather on Bald Mountain and hold sabbath, Mussorgsky was able to create a dreadfully haunting piece of music.

Page 7: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Foreshadowing and Flashback

Foreshadowing: clues to hint at what might happen later

Flashback: scene within a story that interrupts to relate events that occurred in the past

Page 8: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Symbol

• An object, happening, person, or place which stands not only for itself but also for something else, especially a big idea.

• Brainstorm common symbols in every day life

Page 9: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Simile

• Comparison of two unlike things using like or as

– The rugby ball was like a giant egg, which he held carefully while he ran.

Page 10: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Personification

• Gives an inanimate object the characteristics of life.

• The sunshine walked slowly across the lawn as I waited on the porch.

Page 11: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Metaphor

• Comparison of two unlike things stating one is the other

• My fear is an anchor holding me down, preventing me from trying new activities.

Page 12: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

hyperbole

• A figure of speech in which an

extreme exaggeration is used for

effect. The author does not intend to be taken literally.• “Of Paul Bunyan’s big blue ox, Babe, measuring

between the eyes forty-two ax-handles and a plug of Star tobacco exactly.”

-Carl Sandburg

Page 13: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Dialect • A form of language spoken by people in a

particular region or group. Dialects differ in pronunciations, grammar, and word choice. Writers use dialect to make their characters seem realistic.

• http://www.okcfox.com/story/23373829/dialect-maps-show-the-variety-of-american-english

“…there lived ol’ Brer Possum. He was a fine feller. Why, he never liked to see no critters in trouble. He was always helpin’ out, a-doin’ somethin’ for others.”

“Brer Possum’s Dilemma”

-Jackie Torrence

Page 14: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Allusion• An allusion makes reference to a historical

or literary person, place or event with which the reader is assumed to be familiar.

“The big kids call me Mercury cause I’m the swiftest thing in the neighborhood.”

Mercury is the Roman messenger god known for great speed.

“Raymond’s Run” Toni Cade Bambara

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alliteration

• The repetition of beginning consonant sound in a line of poetry.

“Let us go forth to lead the land we love.”– J. F. Kennedy, Inaugural

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Oxymoron

• Two contradictory terms used together

– Sweet sorrow, jumbo shrimp, beginning expert, pretty ugly

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Onomatopoeia

• Words which sound like their meaning. The words imitate the sound.

– buzz, hiss, crackle, moo, pop, whoosh, zoom

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Static or Dynamic Character

• A static character does not learn or change from the beginning to the end of the story.

• A dynamic character changes or learns something due to the events in the story.

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Foreshadowing

When an author mentions or hints at something that will happen later in the story, it is called Foreshadowing

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Flashback

• When an author refers back to something that has already happened in the story, it is calledFlashback

Page 21: Elements of Literature Introduction Setting Time and place of the action View the following picture. What can you tell about the story just from studying

Dialect

• Dialect—a form of language spoken

by people in a particular region or group. Words are spelled the way people speak. Dialects differ in pronunciations, grammar, and word choice. Writers use dialect to make their characters seem realistic.